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Three-dimensional point measurements of basic water-quality parameters in Lake Michigan at 63rd Street Beach near Chicago, Illinois (September 2, 2015)

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2015-09-02

Citation

Jackson, P.R., 2017, Continuous monitoring and synoptic mapping of nearshore water quality, currents, and bathymetry in Lake Michigan at 63rd Street Beach at Hyde Park, Illinois: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F75Q4T9W.

Summary

These data were collected as part of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) project template 678-1 entitled "Evaluate immediate and long-term BMP effectiveness of GLRI restoration efforts at urban beaches on Southern and Western Lake Michigan". This project is evaluating the effectiveness of projects that are closely associated with restoration of local habitat and contact recreational activities at two GLRI funded sites in Southern Lake Michigan and one non-GLRI site in Western Lake Michigan. Evaluation of GLRI projects will assess whether goals of recipients are on track and identify any developing unforeseen consequences. Including a third, non-GLRI project site in the evaluation allows comparison between restoration efforts [...]

Contacts

Point of Contact :
Patrick R Jackson
Author :
Patrick R Jackson
Metadata Contact :
Patrick R Jackson
Publisher :
U.S. Geological Survey
Distributor :
U.S. Geological Survey - ScienceBase

Attached Files

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AUV_63rd_2015.zip 315.2 KB application/zip

Purpose

Water-quality parameters are typically measured periodically or continuously at set sampling points or at monitoring stations. By mapping the three-dimensional distribution of water quality in the nearshore simultaneously with mapping of currents and further ensuring that the surveys overlap continuous or discrete sampling points, the temporal variability in continuous measurements can be better understood. In addition, the three-dimensional water-quality distributions often reveal insight into local nearshore processes, point sources for pollution, and effects of infrastructure and restoration efforts on nearshore water quality. Finally, these data may be used for calibration or validation of nearshore hydrodynamic and water quality models used to study and improve beach health.

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