SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Diving Into the Hudson  Without Getting Wet Steve Stanne, Hudson River Estuary Program Jean Valla McAvoy, Hudson River Research Reserve
Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 1. Up to the minute information on specific parameters water temperature at Norrie Point July 24-27, 2011
Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 2. Observe patterns/cycles High and low tides at the George Washington Bridge; July 28 - 30, 2009
Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 3. Show relationships between parameters or cycles Tides vs salinity at George Washington Bridge; July 28 - 30, 2009
Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 4. Collects data during short-term events or in inclement conditions when scientists may not be able to collect samples  Turbidity (muddiness) of the water at Schodack Island following heavy rains in early July, 2009
Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 5. Create line graphs with website interfaces or download data to further customize graphs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5aG5f-Rlaw   Click to view video about HRECOS system HRECOS  Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System
HRECOS  Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System
Click here to go to HRECOS home page  www.hrecos.org   The site offers resources including lesson plans, stories about phenomena that can visualized using HRECOS graphs, and forecasts of river conditions.  Click on Current Conditions to access data from remote sensors in  the river.
HRECOS  Current Conditions page Use dropdown menus to choose station, parameter, etc. Choose Units and whether to plot Continous readings or Daily averages. Use Start Date/End Date or Set Start/Set End to choose time periods (within limits - click on ? for more details). Plot one parameter or compare two in one graph.
For younger students just starting to learn about graphs, choose parameters that illustrate well-known phenomena:  Water temperature rising and falling over a 24 hour period from the cool of early  morning to the heat of mid-afternoon to the cool of evening. Water temperature rising and falling over several days. Why did temperatures not go as high on 7/18? Link to sunlight (listed as total radiation in the list of meteorological parameters). It was cloudy on 7/18.
Water temperature rising and falling over the seasons through 2010-2011 school year (note that plot uses daily averages, not continuous readings). On a sunny day, have students observe water temperature graph early in the school day and predict what it will look like later in the day.
Look for this 24 hour pattern of  DO levels due to photosynthesis in daylight hours and respiration at night. Use dates in the growing season from mid-May to late September.  With older students, exploring dissolved oxygen [DO] concentrations offers interesting windows on photosynthesis and river ecology.  Though plants die back in winter, DO levels rise then as water cools (cold water holds more DO than warm water) and winds grow stronger. Plot shows daily DO averages.
In the upper estuary (north of the Highlands) DO levels in the growing season reflect photosynthesis by rooted submerged aquatic vegetation [SAV]. Note impacts of cloudiness on 7/18/11.  In the lower estuary (south of the Highlands) DO levels are more likely to reflect photosynthesis by phytoplankton. There are occasional spikes in DO when phytoplankton blooms occur.
If you want to change the format of the graphs or have students draw graphs by hand, then use the Download button to download data displayed on a graph (single parameter graphs only) into an Excel  data table.  Note: If students will plot their own graphs by hand, then choose Daily Average readings, as was done here for a DO peak due to a plankton bloom at the George Washington Bridge. Continuous data is overwhelming; four 15 minute data points every hour X 24 hours in a day equals 96 numbers!
Simplify downloaded data as desired.  Now have students plot their own graphs by hand … Delete column B decimals, for example.  or select columns A & B, then choose Insert Column ...  to display this graph.
Earth science students can study tidal cycles.  A pattern of two high and two low tides each day is typical of the Hudson estuary, as seen here for Norrie Point.  Tides travel all the way to Albany; the surface of the river is at sea level even there.  How do tide events at Albany differ from the same tide events at Norrie? A given tide event happens later in Albany than at Norrie, and is more extreme (highs are higher, lows lower). Set up math problems with the graphs. How much higher is the first high tide of 7/31 when it reaches Albany than it was at Norrie? How much later is this event in Albany? What was the velocity of the tidal wave between Norrie and Albany?
http://ny.water.usgs.gov/projects/dialer_plots/saltfront.html   Click this URL to visit the actual U.S. Geological Survey salt front website Another good source of salinity, temperature, and tide data; also has links to stream level gauges on Hudson River tributaries.
Map and table show salt front location
NOAA: remotely sensed data from other estuaries  http://estuaries.gov/ScienceData/Home.aspx   Click this URL to visit the actual NOAA data website
HRECOS  Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System Use the graphs to tell stories, pose questions, solve mysteries. Create hypotheses and find evidence to support them. Here are some examples. What causes brief spikes in turbidity at Schodack Island?  Hint: the river here is a narrow shipping channel. The propellers of ships and powerful tugs churn up mud, causing sudden peaks in turbidity at Schodack Island.
2a.  At Albany at Hudson River Mile 140 (mile 0 is at the Battery in NYC), what caused the peak in water level 4/29/11 – 4/30/11?  Did it affect the tide cycle? Data for what other HRECOS parameter(s) might support your hypothesis? Plotting a graph of rainfall (in mm) shows that runoff could have caused elevated water levels. Flooding occurred in the Adirondacks at this time.  The high and low tide cycle is superimposed on the higher base level.
2b.Was that peak in river level  on 4/29/11 – 4/30/11 also evident at Schodack Island (Hudson River Mile 131)?  Was the peak as high at Schodack as at Albany, relative to the levels on days before and after? Was this peak in river level  on 4/29/11 – 4/30/11 visible at Norrie Point (Hudson River Mile 85)?  The surface of the Hudson is at sea level virtually all the way to Troy. River level is controlled by sea level. Flooding due to runoff is rare below Catskill (Hudson River Mile 112). The 4/29-4/30 peak, lower at Schodack, was not evident at all at Norrie.
3. Why does the pattern of dissolved oxygen (DO) levels at Schodack Island differ from that at Tivoli South Bay 8/12/10 – 8/15/10? Hint: South Bay is covered by floating water chestnut plants in summer.  Data for what other parameter(s) might  support your hypothesis? Water chestnut photosynthesis puts oxygen into the air; shading by chesnut prevents photosynthesis in the water below. DO rises as rising tides flood the bay with water from the open river; it falls as respiration depletes oxygen and the tide goes down .
4. What accounts for the elevated water level at  Norrie Point on 12/01/10? Hint: Remember that  water level in the estuary is controlled by sea level. Data for what other parameter(s) might  support your hypothesis? Since river level at Norrie is controlled by sea level, surges in water level caused by coastal storms impact the Hudson. The wind direction/speed vector plot for Castle Point, NJ (the HRECOS site closest to the ocean) shows strong winds from the southeast due to a coastal storm passing on 12/01/10. (The arrows show wind direction as though the graph area were a compass dial; their vertical position indicates speed.) The peak in water level at Norrie was caused by storm surge.
5. What accounts for the depressed water level at  Norrie Point on 12/28/10? Hint: Remember that  water level in the estuary is controlled by sea level. Data for what other parameter(s) might  support your hypothesis? In this case, the wind direction/speed vector plot for Castle Point shows sustained strong northerly winds 12/26/10 – 12/27/10. These winds literally pushed ocean waters away from the coast, causing “blowout tides” there and along the Hudson .
6.  ***A challenge for real Hudson River geeks:*** Salinity goes up as water temperature goes down at Castle Point, Hoboken, from  7/03/11 – 7/31/11. What accounts for this pattern? The pattern is easier to see in a graph of daily averages instead of continuous readings. Note that the plots of salinity and temperature cross roughly every seven days.
Hint : Can you think of a cycle affecting the river in which a seven day interval plays a role? The cycle of spring  tides (greatest tidal range-higher highs/lower lows) and neap tides (least tidal range-lower highs/higher lows) is tied to the moon’s phases and relative positions of moon, sun, and earth over a 28 (7 X 4) day period.  The graph is fairly “noisy,” but it shows the approximate times of spring tides (indicated by this arrow  ) and neap tides (indicated by this arrow  ).
This graph plots salinity against the lunar tidal cycle. At what points in the cycle is salinity  highest ?  This graph plots temperature against the lunar tidal cycle. When in the cycle is temperature  lowest ? Salinity peaks at times of spring tides. Temperature is lowest at times of spring tides.
Tidal currents are strongest during spring tides. They mix the layers, making water near the surface saltier and cooler. During neap tides, stratification is more pronounced, so water near the surface is fresher and warmer. Graphic copyright www.chemgapedia.de The last piece of the puzzle involves currents and their effect on stratification - layering  of water masses – in the estuary.  The lower Hudson is a partially mixed estuary. Denser, saltier (and colder) water layers underneath fresher (and warmer) water at the surface.
For more information, contact Steve Stanne, Education Coordinator NYSDEC – Hudson River Estuary Program in cooperation with the NYS Water Resources Institute at  Cornell University 21 South Putt Corners Road New Paltz, NY 12561 845 256-3077 [email_address] Jean McAvoy, Education Coordinator NYSDEC - Hudson River Research Reserve in cooperation with the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission Norrie Point Environmental Center PO Box 315 Staatsburg, NY  12580 845-889-4745 x 105 [email_address]

More Related Content

PPTX
In a warming climate, why do we see decreasing heat flux in the Arctic Ocean?
PDF
ChesapeakeBayCouncil_SeaLevelRiseImpact
PPTX
Retrospective analysis of hydrologic impacts in the Chesapeake Bay watershed
PDF
M. Stoever Watershed Report
PPT
River Discharge, Water Balance And Hydrographs
PDF
HornbachEtAl
PPTX
Surface Water Hydrology
PDF
Ch2 precipitation
In a warming climate, why do we see decreasing heat flux in the Arctic Ocean?
ChesapeakeBayCouncil_SeaLevelRiseImpact
Retrospective analysis of hydrologic impacts in the Chesapeake Bay watershed
M. Stoever Watershed Report
River Discharge, Water Balance And Hydrographs
HornbachEtAl
Surface Water Hydrology
Ch2 precipitation

What's hot (20)

PPTX
L7 hydrograph
PPTX
Hydrology Chapter 1
PPTX
Poster for BIOS
PPT
OBSERVING OCEAN SURFACE WIND AND STRESS BY SCATTEROMETER CONSTELLATION
PPT
Hydrology introduction ( catchment area)
PDF
Ch3 hydrological losses
PPTX
CE-235 EH Lec 1
PPTX
Hyetograph and hydrograph analysis
PDF
Assessing Sensitivity to Drought and Climate Change with an Integrated Surfac...
DOCX
Hydrology seminar ppt
PDF
Assessing Cumulative Effects with Integrated Modelling
PDF
Research plan- The Impact of Land-Use in Lowland and Coastal Area on The Grou...
PDF
SterliniEtAl2015
PPTX
Arsaln abid
PPTX
Module 1 introduction
PPTX
(3) irrigation hydrology
DOCX
Baseflow
PPTX
PDF
Hydrology and water management(EVAPORATION & INFILTRATION)...
L7 hydrograph
Hydrology Chapter 1
Poster for BIOS
OBSERVING OCEAN SURFACE WIND AND STRESS BY SCATTEROMETER CONSTELLATION
Hydrology introduction ( catchment area)
Ch3 hydrological losses
CE-235 EH Lec 1
Hyetograph and hydrograph analysis
Assessing Sensitivity to Drought and Climate Change with an Integrated Surfac...
Hydrology seminar ppt
Assessing Cumulative Effects with Integrated Modelling
Research plan- The Impact of Land-Use in Lowland and Coastal Area on The Grou...
SterliniEtAl2015
Arsaln abid
Module 1 introduction
(3) irrigation hydrology
Baseflow
Hydrology and water management(EVAPORATION & INFILTRATION)...
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PDF
Finding Free Primary Sources Online and Using them in Your Classroom
PPTX
Karla Purcell: JFK Magnet School Garden, Port Chester, NY
PPT
Materials Management, Terry Laibach, NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
PDF
Investigating Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
PPT
The Hudson River--Journey into Inquiry, by Jill Leinung and Linda Kaminski
PDF
[THVInstitute13] Uncommon Approaches to the Common Core
PPT
Using Media Arts to Build Literacy Skills, with Children's Media Project
DOC
Teachers and Site Staff - Ideas for Collaborating
PPS
Frederic Church's Olana
DOCX
[THVInstitute13] Social Studies Tool Kit for Dutchess County Educators
PPTX
Sea Level Rise in the Hudson Valley
PPTX
PPSX
The Hudson during & after extreme weather events. What do they tell us about ...
PPT
Common Core lesson planning
PPTX
How and why the Hudson Valley's climate is changing
DOCX
Web quest: Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
PPTX
Storm King: Cornerstone of the Environmental Movement
PPTX
These maps are for the birds
KEY
Bénéfices des blogs dans votre communication sur les médias sociaux
PDF
A12 reporters de territoires - #et9
Finding Free Primary Sources Online and Using them in Your Classroom
Karla Purcell: JFK Magnet School Garden, Port Chester, NY
Materials Management, Terry Laibach, NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
Investigating Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
The Hudson River--Journey into Inquiry, by Jill Leinung and Linda Kaminski
[THVInstitute13] Uncommon Approaches to the Common Core
Using Media Arts to Build Literacy Skills, with Children's Media Project
Teachers and Site Staff - Ideas for Collaborating
Frederic Church's Olana
[THVInstitute13] Social Studies Tool Kit for Dutchess County Educators
Sea Level Rise in the Hudson Valley
The Hudson during & after extreme weather events. What do they tell us about ...
Common Core lesson planning
How and why the Hudson Valley's climate is changing
Web quest: Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
Storm King: Cornerstone of the Environmental Movement
These maps are for the birds
Bénéfices des blogs dans votre communication sur les médias sociaux
A12 reporters de territoires - #et9
Ad

Similar to Diving into the Hudson Without Getting Wet (20)

PDF
Dissolved Oxygen in Lake Erie
PDF
Climatic Influences on Coastal/Estuarine Physical Oceanography …and Possible ...
PDF
EOPS_2018_06_28.pdf
PDF
Water Quality and Pollution
PPT
20100418_Herman_Ridderinkhof_Getijden
PPTX
Hydrosphere
PPTX
Climate change: Changes in the hydrosphere
PPTX
Remote Sensing Techniques for Oceanography Satelitte and In Situ Observations
PDF
138201652-Hydrographic-Surveying the legit
PPT
GEOG.ppt
PPT
Satesh Workshop Southasia Journalists 27 Aug09
PPTX
Planet Guardians Presentation
PDF
DSD-INT 2017 Tracking of red tide movement in Hong Kong waters - Wong
PPTX
Project powerpoint
PPTX
Project powerpoint
PPTX
Project powerpoint
PDF
Lit Review7
PPTX
Ecosystem Vulnerability and Cumulative Impacts on th eOceans of hawaii
PPTX
Chapter three principle ecology
PDF
Using GIS to Visualize and Analyze Environmental Time-Series Data as Raster M...
Dissolved Oxygen in Lake Erie
Climatic Influences on Coastal/Estuarine Physical Oceanography …and Possible ...
EOPS_2018_06_28.pdf
Water Quality and Pollution
20100418_Herman_Ridderinkhof_Getijden
Hydrosphere
Climate change: Changes in the hydrosphere
Remote Sensing Techniques for Oceanography Satelitte and In Situ Observations
138201652-Hydrographic-Surveying the legit
GEOG.ppt
Satesh Workshop Southasia Journalists 27 Aug09
Planet Guardians Presentation
DSD-INT 2017 Tracking of red tide movement in Hong Kong waters - Wong
Project powerpoint
Project powerpoint
Project powerpoint
Lit Review7
Ecosystem Vulnerability and Cumulative Impacts on th eOceans of hawaii
Chapter three principle ecology
Using GIS to Visualize and Analyze Environmental Time-Series Data as Raster M...

More from Teaching the Hudson Valley (20)

DOCX
Climate change true false
DOCX
Rubric for letter to an elected official
DOCX
Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
DOCX
PDF
Sea level rise science
PPTX
How communities are taking action on climate change
PDF
Helping Youth Eat Real: Classroom Lessons to Transform Youth & their Communities
PPT
Recycling and Composting, Ann Jaffe-Holmes, Greenburgh Nature Center
PPTX
Nutrition Education DESIGN Procedure: Pam Koch, Tisch Center for Food, Educa...
PPTX
Conventional vs organic agriculture: Cornelia Harris, Cary Institute of Ecosy...
PPT
Why Garden at School? Cornelia Harris, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
PPTX
Cathy Law: Courtyard Gardens at New Paltz HS
PPTX
Natural Inclinations: Illustrating Food and Farms with Gina Palmer
PPT
[THVInstitute13] Sea captain, soldier and slave
PPTX
[THVInstitute13] Cadmium at Foundry Cove: An Ecology & Evolution Story
PPT
[THVInstitute13] A Question of Interest: Knox's Headquarters field experience
PPT
[THVInstitute13] Visual Thinking Strategies & the Common Core State Standards
PPTX
[THVInstitute13] Shifting Perspectives: Making History Relevant and Relatable...
DOCX
[THVInstitute13] Resource Page for Promoting Historical Thinking with Place-B...
PPT
[THVInstitute13] Visual Thinking Strategies and the Common Core State Standards
Climate change true false
Rubric for letter to an elected official
Sea level rise in the Hudson Valley
Sea level rise science
How communities are taking action on climate change
Helping Youth Eat Real: Classroom Lessons to Transform Youth & their Communities
Recycling and Composting, Ann Jaffe-Holmes, Greenburgh Nature Center
Nutrition Education DESIGN Procedure: Pam Koch, Tisch Center for Food, Educa...
Conventional vs organic agriculture: Cornelia Harris, Cary Institute of Ecosy...
Why Garden at School? Cornelia Harris, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Cathy Law: Courtyard Gardens at New Paltz HS
Natural Inclinations: Illustrating Food and Farms with Gina Palmer
[THVInstitute13] Sea captain, soldier and slave
[THVInstitute13] Cadmium at Foundry Cove: An Ecology & Evolution Story
[THVInstitute13] A Question of Interest: Knox's Headquarters field experience
[THVInstitute13] Visual Thinking Strategies & the Common Core State Standards
[THVInstitute13] Shifting Perspectives: Making History Relevant and Relatable...
[THVInstitute13] Resource Page for Promoting Historical Thinking with Place-B...
[THVInstitute13] Visual Thinking Strategies and the Common Core State Standards

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
PPTX
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PPTX
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PDF
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PDF
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PPTX
Radiologic_Anatomy_of_the_Brachial_plexus [final].pptx
PPTX
UV-Visible spectroscopy..pptx UV-Visible Spectroscopy – Electronic Transition...
PDF
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PDF
LNK 2025 (2).pdf MWEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE
PDF
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
PPTX
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
PDF
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
PDF
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
Radiologic_Anatomy_of_the_Brachial_plexus [final].pptx
UV-Visible spectroscopy..pptx UV-Visible Spectroscopy – Electronic Transition...
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
LNK 2025 (2).pdf MWEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape

Diving into the Hudson Without Getting Wet

  • 1. Diving Into the Hudson Without Getting Wet Steve Stanne, Hudson River Estuary Program Jean Valla McAvoy, Hudson River Research Reserve
  • 2. Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 1. Up to the minute information on specific parameters water temperature at Norrie Point July 24-27, 2011
  • 3. Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 2. Observe patterns/cycles High and low tides at the George Washington Bridge; July 28 - 30, 2009
  • 4. Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 3. Show relationships between parameters or cycles Tides vs salinity at George Washington Bridge; July 28 - 30, 2009
  • 5. Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 4. Collects data during short-term events or in inclement conditions when scientists may not be able to collect samples Turbidity (muddiness) of the water at Schodack Island following heavy rains in early July, 2009
  • 6. Remote sensing Taking the river’s vital signs from a distance 5. Create line graphs with website interfaces or download data to further customize graphs
  • 7. www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5aG5f-Rlaw Click to view video about HRECOS system HRECOS Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System
  • 8. HRECOS Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System
  • 9. Click here to go to HRECOS home page www.hrecos.org The site offers resources including lesson plans, stories about phenomena that can visualized using HRECOS graphs, and forecasts of river conditions. Click on Current Conditions to access data from remote sensors in the river.
  • 10. HRECOS Current Conditions page Use dropdown menus to choose station, parameter, etc. Choose Units and whether to plot Continous readings or Daily averages. Use Start Date/End Date or Set Start/Set End to choose time periods (within limits - click on ? for more details). Plot one parameter or compare two in one graph.
  • 11. For younger students just starting to learn about graphs, choose parameters that illustrate well-known phenomena: Water temperature rising and falling over a 24 hour period from the cool of early morning to the heat of mid-afternoon to the cool of evening. Water temperature rising and falling over several days. Why did temperatures not go as high on 7/18? Link to sunlight (listed as total radiation in the list of meteorological parameters). It was cloudy on 7/18.
  • 12. Water temperature rising and falling over the seasons through 2010-2011 school year (note that plot uses daily averages, not continuous readings). On a sunny day, have students observe water temperature graph early in the school day and predict what it will look like later in the day.
  • 13. Look for this 24 hour pattern of DO levels due to photosynthesis in daylight hours and respiration at night. Use dates in the growing season from mid-May to late September. With older students, exploring dissolved oxygen [DO] concentrations offers interesting windows on photosynthesis and river ecology. Though plants die back in winter, DO levels rise then as water cools (cold water holds more DO than warm water) and winds grow stronger. Plot shows daily DO averages.
  • 14. In the upper estuary (north of the Highlands) DO levels in the growing season reflect photosynthesis by rooted submerged aquatic vegetation [SAV]. Note impacts of cloudiness on 7/18/11. In the lower estuary (south of the Highlands) DO levels are more likely to reflect photosynthesis by phytoplankton. There are occasional spikes in DO when phytoplankton blooms occur.
  • 15. If you want to change the format of the graphs or have students draw graphs by hand, then use the Download button to download data displayed on a graph (single parameter graphs only) into an Excel data table. Note: If students will plot their own graphs by hand, then choose Daily Average readings, as was done here for a DO peak due to a plankton bloom at the George Washington Bridge. Continuous data is overwhelming; four 15 minute data points every hour X 24 hours in a day equals 96 numbers!
  • 16. Simplify downloaded data as desired. Now have students plot their own graphs by hand … Delete column B decimals, for example. or select columns A & B, then choose Insert Column ... to display this graph.
  • 17. Earth science students can study tidal cycles. A pattern of two high and two low tides each day is typical of the Hudson estuary, as seen here for Norrie Point. Tides travel all the way to Albany; the surface of the river is at sea level even there. How do tide events at Albany differ from the same tide events at Norrie? A given tide event happens later in Albany than at Norrie, and is more extreme (highs are higher, lows lower). Set up math problems with the graphs. How much higher is the first high tide of 7/31 when it reaches Albany than it was at Norrie? How much later is this event in Albany? What was the velocity of the tidal wave between Norrie and Albany?
  • 18. http://ny.water.usgs.gov/projects/dialer_plots/saltfront.html Click this URL to visit the actual U.S. Geological Survey salt front website Another good source of salinity, temperature, and tide data; also has links to stream level gauges on Hudson River tributaries.
  • 19. Map and table show salt front location
  • 20. NOAA: remotely sensed data from other estuaries http://estuaries.gov/ScienceData/Home.aspx Click this URL to visit the actual NOAA data website
  • 21. HRECOS Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System Use the graphs to tell stories, pose questions, solve mysteries. Create hypotheses and find evidence to support them. Here are some examples. What causes brief spikes in turbidity at Schodack Island? Hint: the river here is a narrow shipping channel. The propellers of ships and powerful tugs churn up mud, causing sudden peaks in turbidity at Schodack Island.
  • 22. 2a. At Albany at Hudson River Mile 140 (mile 0 is at the Battery in NYC), what caused the peak in water level 4/29/11 – 4/30/11? Did it affect the tide cycle? Data for what other HRECOS parameter(s) might support your hypothesis? Plotting a graph of rainfall (in mm) shows that runoff could have caused elevated water levels. Flooding occurred in the Adirondacks at this time. The high and low tide cycle is superimposed on the higher base level.
  • 23. 2b.Was that peak in river level on 4/29/11 – 4/30/11 also evident at Schodack Island (Hudson River Mile 131)? Was the peak as high at Schodack as at Albany, relative to the levels on days before and after? Was this peak in river level on 4/29/11 – 4/30/11 visible at Norrie Point (Hudson River Mile 85)? The surface of the Hudson is at sea level virtually all the way to Troy. River level is controlled by sea level. Flooding due to runoff is rare below Catskill (Hudson River Mile 112). The 4/29-4/30 peak, lower at Schodack, was not evident at all at Norrie.
  • 24. 3. Why does the pattern of dissolved oxygen (DO) levels at Schodack Island differ from that at Tivoli South Bay 8/12/10 – 8/15/10? Hint: South Bay is covered by floating water chestnut plants in summer. Data for what other parameter(s) might support your hypothesis? Water chestnut photosynthesis puts oxygen into the air; shading by chesnut prevents photosynthesis in the water below. DO rises as rising tides flood the bay with water from the open river; it falls as respiration depletes oxygen and the tide goes down .
  • 25. 4. What accounts for the elevated water level at Norrie Point on 12/01/10? Hint: Remember that water level in the estuary is controlled by sea level. Data for what other parameter(s) might support your hypothesis? Since river level at Norrie is controlled by sea level, surges in water level caused by coastal storms impact the Hudson. The wind direction/speed vector plot for Castle Point, NJ (the HRECOS site closest to the ocean) shows strong winds from the southeast due to a coastal storm passing on 12/01/10. (The arrows show wind direction as though the graph area were a compass dial; their vertical position indicates speed.) The peak in water level at Norrie was caused by storm surge.
  • 26. 5. What accounts for the depressed water level at Norrie Point on 12/28/10? Hint: Remember that water level in the estuary is controlled by sea level. Data for what other parameter(s) might support your hypothesis? In this case, the wind direction/speed vector plot for Castle Point shows sustained strong northerly winds 12/26/10 – 12/27/10. These winds literally pushed ocean waters away from the coast, causing “blowout tides” there and along the Hudson .
  • 27. 6. ***A challenge for real Hudson River geeks:*** Salinity goes up as water temperature goes down at Castle Point, Hoboken, from 7/03/11 – 7/31/11. What accounts for this pattern? The pattern is easier to see in a graph of daily averages instead of continuous readings. Note that the plots of salinity and temperature cross roughly every seven days.
  • 28. Hint : Can you think of a cycle affecting the river in which a seven day interval plays a role? The cycle of spring tides (greatest tidal range-higher highs/lower lows) and neap tides (least tidal range-lower highs/higher lows) is tied to the moon’s phases and relative positions of moon, sun, and earth over a 28 (7 X 4) day period. The graph is fairly “noisy,” but it shows the approximate times of spring tides (indicated by this arrow ) and neap tides (indicated by this arrow ).
  • 29. This graph plots salinity against the lunar tidal cycle. At what points in the cycle is salinity highest ? This graph plots temperature against the lunar tidal cycle. When in the cycle is temperature lowest ? Salinity peaks at times of spring tides. Temperature is lowest at times of spring tides.
  • 30. Tidal currents are strongest during spring tides. They mix the layers, making water near the surface saltier and cooler. During neap tides, stratification is more pronounced, so water near the surface is fresher and warmer. Graphic copyright www.chemgapedia.de The last piece of the puzzle involves currents and their effect on stratification - layering of water masses – in the estuary. The lower Hudson is a partially mixed estuary. Denser, saltier (and colder) water layers underneath fresher (and warmer) water at the surface.
  • 31. For more information, contact Steve Stanne, Education Coordinator NYSDEC – Hudson River Estuary Program in cooperation with the NYS Water Resources Institute at Cornell University 21 South Putt Corners Road New Paltz, NY 12561 845 256-3077 [email_address] Jean McAvoy, Education Coordinator NYSDEC - Hudson River Research Reserve in cooperation with the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission Norrie Point Environmental Center PO Box 315 Staatsburg, NY 12580 845-889-4745 x 105 [email_address]