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Regional Deficiencies in River Sediment Supporting Tidal Wetlands in the US


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Type: Resource
Storage: The size of this resource is 100.2 MB
Created: Aug 25, 2021 at 7:31 p.m.
Last updated: Aug 15, 2023 at 2:12 p.m.
DOI: 10.4211/hs.fa0611211f9e461daf0576966ac62412
Citation: See how to cite this resource
Sharing Status: Published
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Abstract

How much do rivers contribute to the accretion balance of tidal wetlands facing sea level rise? This resource contains data answering this question for over 4,000 rivers in the 48 contiguous US states.

This Resource contains data generated as part of the project "Resolving sediment connectivity between rivers and estuaries by tracking particles with their microbial genetic signature". This project was funded from 01 May 2021 through 30 May 2024 by the National Science Foundation Award Number 2049073, Geosciences Directorate, Earth Sciences Division, Geomorphology and Land Use Dynamics Program.

Subject Keywords

Coverage

Spatial

Coordinate System/Geographic Projection:
WGS 84 EPSG:4326
Coordinate Units:
Decimal degrees
North Latitude
49.8843°
East Longitude
-65.0032°
South Latitude
23.9516°
West Longitude
-128.2854°

Temporal

Start Date:
End Date:

Content

readMe.txt

readMe
This resource contains an R script (RegionalSedimentDeficienciesScriptsR) for adding six of the .csv files here into an R project. The attributes of those six files are explained in accretionDataAttributes.csv and NHDdataAttributes.csv. The script steps through a series of analyses and plot generations to analyze the data. 

Related Resources

This resource has a related resource in another format https://tinyurl.com/SedimentPancake

Credits

Funding Agencies

This resource was created using funding from the following sources:
Agency Name Award Title Award Number
National Science Foundation Resolving Sediment Connectivity Between Rivers and Estuaries by Tracking Particles with their Microbial Genetic Signature 2049073

How to Cite

Ensign, S., J. Halls, E. Peck (2023). Regional Deficiencies in River Sediment Supporting Tidal Wetlands in the US, HydroShare, https://doi.org/10.4211/hs.fa0611211f9e461daf0576966ac62412

This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike CC BY-SA.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
CC-BY-SA

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