Changing Waters: Trends in Central Appalachian Streamflow in the Presence of Mountaintop Mining
| dc.contributor.advisor | McGlynn, Brian L | |
| dc.contributor.author | Knowlton, Meagan | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2016-04-29T19:05:38Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2016-04-29T19:05:38Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2016-04-29 | |
| dc.department | Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences | |
| dc.description.abstract | Mountaintop mining (MTM) became popular in the 1970s in Central Appalachia and today remains the dominant form of coal mining in the region (Ross et al., 2016). Approximately 6-7% of the Appalachian Coalfield Region in West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee is covered by mountaintop mining operations (Lindberg et. al, 2011). MTM involves stripping mountain surfaces by up to 300 vertical meters of rock material (“overburden”) to gain access to thin coal seams (Lindberg et al., 2011; Palmer et al., 2010). The overburden is then deposited in adjacent valleys as so-called “valley fills,” often burying headwater streams that originate in the mountains. These valley fills increase a watershed’s storage potential to an unknown degree.
Hydrologic processes play significant roles in species habitats, aquatic chemistry and ecology, and overall aquatic ecosystem health (e.g., Miller & Zégre, 2014). The impacts of human activities and climate variability may cause hydrologic regimes to change, threatening the processes by which streams support ecosystem and human health. MTM research, especially in Central Appalachia, has largely focused on the effects of MTM on water chemistry and aquatic ecosystem health (Bernhardt et al., 2012; Palmer et al., 2010; Bernhardt & Palmer, 2011; Lindberg et al., 2011). This study contributes a regional-scale examination of hydrologic alterations in the presence of changing climate and land cover conditions to the field of hydrology.
One of the possible effects of topographic change from MTMVF could be a change in flow duration curves. I expected to see increases in low flows due to increased storage in the new MTM systems; during a storm, the valley fills likely increase the storage potential of the area. Furthermore, I hypothesized that any possible effect of MTM on hydrology will increase with an increase in the watershed area affected by MTM. | |
| dc.identifier.uri | ||
| dc.language.iso | en_US | |
| dc.subject | mountaintop mining | |
| dc.subject | Hydrology | |
| dc.subject | Water resources | |
| dc.subject | flow regime | |
| dc.subject | stationarity | |
| dc.subject | runoff ratio | |
| dc.title | Changing Waters: Trends in Central Appalachian Streamflow in the Presence of Mountaintop Mining | |
| dc.type | Master's project | |
| duke.embargo.months | 0 |
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