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Watershed factors affecting stream acidification in the White Mountains of New Hampshire,USA
Authors:Scott W. Bailey  James W. Hornbeck  C. Wayne Martin  Donald C. Buso
Affiliation:(1) IEP, Inc., PO Box 780, 01532 Northborough, Massachusetts, USA;(2) Northeastern Forest Experiment Station USDA Forest Service, 03824 Durham, New Hampshire, USA;(3) Institute of Ecosystem Studies, New York Botanical Garden, 12545 Millbrook, New York, USA
Abstract:The streams tributary to acidic Cone Pond, pH 4.5–4.8, and circumneutral Black Pond, pH 5.3–6.4, in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, USA, were monitored for a year. The watersheds of these two ponds were characterized in terms of geology and stream hydrology. Chemical gradients and patterns in rock weathering and groundwater discharge explain many of the differences in mineral content and acidity of the streams. The rocks of Black watershed produced an average of ten times the equivalent of basic cations as rocks from Cone watershed. This is on the same order as the difference in acidity of the two streams. Down-stream changes in stream chemistry follow differing patterns, but reflect the same principle of residence time and water path length controlling chemical evolution of streamwater. Watershed and aquatic managers may use these parameters in an inexpensive and simple assessment of the susceptibility of individual streams and ponds to acidification. A method is recommended to determine quickly the potential influence of bedrock type to aquatic chemistry.
Keywords:Acid precipitation  Acidification  New Hampshire  Ponds  Rock weathering  Stream chemistry  Streams  White Mountains
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