SEDIMENT YIELDS AND SOURCES IN SELECTED PARTS OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY WATERSHED
Analysis of 35 USGS daily-load sediment stations with at least 3 years of data collected between 1985 and 2001, indicates that 4 of the 5 locations with the highest average-annual sediment yields are for stations draining to the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. These include the Little Conestoga Creek near Churchtown, Pa. (368 tons/ km2/yr); Little Conestoga Creek site 3A, near Morgantown, Pa. (116 tons/ km2/yr); Mill Creek at Eshelman Mill Road near Lyndon, Pa. (113 tons/ km2/yr); and Raystown Branch Juniata River at Saxton, Pa. (91 tons/ km2/yr). Of these four stations, three are in the Conestoga River Basin. Meteoric 10Be erosion indices match the spatial patterns compiled from the daily-load sediment stations and are consistent with the high erosion rates in the Conestoga River subbasin. The Conestoga River Basin subbasin drains primarily agriculture. This may be influencing erosion rates and sediment yields.
The Pocomoke River subbasin in Maryland was chosen to test multiple fingerprinting techniques for identifying sediment sources in the watersheds. Fingerprints include: 7Be, 137Cs, 210 Pb, total carbon, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and stable isotopes (N and C). The subbasin sampling strategy is focused to distinguish upland sediment sources (land use) versus origin in the stream corridor (stream bed and banks) Preliminary results indicate that the bed of the Pocomoke River and its tributaries are a major source of sediment.