Coastal Environmental Geochemistry research at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center spans multiple ecosystems and topics, including coastal wetlands, aquifers, and estuaries, with the goal of providing data and guidance to federal, state, local, and private land owners and managers on these vital ecosystems.
Research Themes
Coastal Environmental Geochemistry research at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center spans multiple ecosystems and topics, including coastal wetlands, aquifers, and estuaries.
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Environmental Geochemistry- Wetland Resilience
Data releases associated with the Environmental Geochemistry Project.
Continuous monitoring data from natural and restored salt marshes on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 2016-17
Time-series of biogeochemical and flow data from a tidal salt-marsh creek, Sage Lot Pond, Waquoit Bay, Massachusetts, 2012-2016 (ver. 2.0, July 2023)
Geochemical data supporting analysis of geochemical conditions and nitrogen transport in nearshore groundwater and the subterranean estuary at a Cape Cod embayment, East Falmouth, Massachusetts
Collection, analysis, and age-dating of sediment cores from salt marshes on the south shore of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, from 2013 through 2014
Coastal Groundwater Chemical Data from the North and South Shores of Long Island, New York
Data compilation of soil respiration, moisture, and temperature measurements from global warming experiments from 1994-2014
Environmental Geochemistry Project mulitmedia objects
Environmental Geochemistry Project publications
An important biogeochemical link between organic and inorganic carbon cycling: Effects of organic alkalinity on carbonate chemistry in coastal waters influenced by intertidal salt marshes
Getting to the core of the matter
Tidal wetland gross primary production across the continental United States, 2000–2019
Phytoplankton community structure response to groundwater-borne nutrients in the inland bays, Delaware
Water salinity and inundation control soil carbon decomposition during salt marsh restoration: An incubation experiment
Salt marsh ecosystem restructuring enhances elevation resilience and carbon storage during accelerating relative sea-level rise
Natural climate solutions for the United States
Blue carbon as a tool to support coastal management and restoration: Bringing wetlands to market case study
Deciphering the dynamics of inorganic carbon export from intertidal salt marshes using high-frequency measurements
Geochemical conditions and nitrogen transport in nearshore groundwater and the subterranean estuary at a Cape Cod embayment, East Falmouth, Massachusetts, 2013–14
Passive experimental warming decouples air and sediment temperatures in a salt marsh
Environmental controls, emergent scaling, and predictions of greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in coastal salt marshes
Coastal Environmental Geochemistry research at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center spans multiple ecosystems and topics, including coastal wetlands, aquifers, and estuaries, with the goal of providing data and guidance to federal, state, local, and private land owners and managers on these vital ecosystems.
Research Themes
Coastal Environmental Geochemistry research at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center spans multiple ecosystems and topics, including coastal wetlands, aquifers, and estuaries.
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Environmental Geochemistry- Wetland Resilience
Data releases associated with the Environmental Geochemistry Project.
Continuous monitoring data from natural and restored salt marshes on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 2016-17
Time-series of biogeochemical and flow data from a tidal salt-marsh creek, Sage Lot Pond, Waquoit Bay, Massachusetts, 2012-2016 (ver. 2.0, July 2023)
Geochemical data supporting analysis of geochemical conditions and nitrogen transport in nearshore groundwater and the subterranean estuary at a Cape Cod embayment, East Falmouth, Massachusetts
Collection, analysis, and age-dating of sediment cores from salt marshes on the south shore of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, from 2013 through 2014
Coastal Groundwater Chemical Data from the North and South Shores of Long Island, New York
Data compilation of soil respiration, moisture, and temperature measurements from global warming experiments from 1994-2014
Environmental Geochemistry Project mulitmedia objects
Environmental Geochemistry Project publications