1970
DOI: 10.1016/0025-3227(70)90014-9
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Sources and distribution of suspended sediment in northern Chesapeake Bay

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Cited by 118 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Suspended-sediment data, which includes USGS Fall Line TSS load measurements (Langland and others, 1999), and TSS monitoring data from the bay and tributaries, deals exclusively with particulate material in the water column for a particular time and region. Notable studies of suspended particulates that resulted in sediment budget information include well-known papers by Biggs (1970), Schubel and Carter (1976), and Nichols and others, (1991). Although TSS studies may be of importance to water clarity and the SAV-TSS-light issues discussed earlier in this report, they are not sufficient alone to construct a comprehensive sediment budget.…”
Section: Estuarine Budgetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Suspended-sediment data, which includes USGS Fall Line TSS load measurements (Langland and others, 1999), and TSS monitoring data from the bay and tributaries, deals exclusively with particulate material in the water column for a particular time and region. Notable studies of suspended particulates that resulted in sediment budget information include well-known papers by Biggs (1970), Schubel and Carter (1976), and Nichols and others, (1991). Although TSS studies may be of importance to water clarity and the SAV-TSS-light issues discussed earlier in this report, they are not sufficient alone to construct a comprehensive sediment budget.…”
Section: Estuarine Budgetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, in one of the few studies to consider the composition of suspended sediments in the bay, Biggs (1970) concluded that skeletal material and organic production contributed 18 and 22 percent, respectively, to suspended matter in the mid-bay. In the northern bay, these values were only 2 percent, being overwhelmed by riverine input from the Susquehanna River.…”
Section: Internal Sources Of Sedimentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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