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Category Archives: Uncategorized
Two papers accepted this month
Banner month for journal publications. Two new ones accepted. One is on the qPCR study of microbial community structure near the WWTP in the Wissahickon that my postdoc Sarah Ledford and Jake Price of Drexel University designed. STOTEN-qPRC_Final (proofs) The … Continue reading
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Welcome to new grad student
Liz Cushman joined our research group this fall. She got her undergrad degree from Juniata College and worked in environmental consulting for several years before joining Temple to work on urban hydrology. She has already been out in the field … Continue reading
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New storm REE data
PhD student Jim Berglund got what we think is the first stormwater data for REEs. The storm samples had higher concentrations (sample 18) and background (shown in sample 24) had stronger anomalies than storm samples. This data will help us … Continue reading
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NSF Rapid project
Congrats to Postdoc Sarah Ledford and her colleague Marie Kurz at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University on receiving funds for an NSF Rapid grant. This is a grant to perform a time-sensitive experiment. Their project makes use … Continue reading
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Simulated stormwater experiment at I-95 basin
We simulated a stormwater event at the I-95 basins to see how they performed at capacity. Dye tracers helped us follow the event, along with our geophysical survey, monitored by grad student Vince Carsillo and undergrad Tyler Wong.
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Turbidity patterns surprisingly constant
We have been comparing turbidity patterns upstream and downstream of a WWTP on the Wissahickon. The two sites have very different grain size and one site is highly embedded while the other is not at all embedded. Despite these differences … Continue reading
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New NSF RAPID grant to look at stream metabolism
Postdoc Sarah Ledford and colleague Marie Kurz at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University recently got news that they will receive a RAPID grant from NSF to study stream metabolism upstream and downstream of WWTP on the WIssahickon. … Continue reading
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Real rain events create crowding at the lab benches
Both Chelsea Kanaley’s and Jim Berglund’s ISCO samplers triggered for a storm this month so we had almost 100 samples to filter all in one day. The lab bench got crowded but no one mixed up samples. Undergrad assistant Arnetia … Continue reading
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Fake rain for a geophysical survey
We don’t wait for rain if we don’t have to: a sprinkler was used to create a rain event to monitoring using various geophysical techniques. Grad student Vince Carsillo and undergrad assistant Tyler Wong are measuring the rain before the … Continue reading
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Assessing streams & teaching 3rd graders
Grad student Chelsea Kanaley and undergrad assistant Hayley Dashnaw were busy this month initiating a stream assessment campaign. They will characterize 6 reaches of the Wissahickon for geomorphology, grain size, embeddedness, light, algae cover, and bank vegetation. They also took … Continue reading
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