Land Use and Water Resources in the Minnesota North Shore Drainage Basin
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Land Use and Water Resources in the Minnesota North Shore Drainage Basin
Published Date
1991
Publisher
University of Minnesota Duluth
Type
Technical Report
Abstract
The major land use change currently occurring in the Lake Superior drainage basin is the increase in deforestation resulting from demand for wood and paper products, which is projected to increase total harvest by 50% between 1988 and 1995 (Minnesota DNR 1989). We know that the extensive pre-settlement logging of the Great Lakes drainage basin affected water quality, as indicated by sediment evidence of increased phosphorus concentrations (Kemp et al. 1972) and diatom production (Stoermer et al. 1985; Schelske et al. 1988), and model predictions of increased phosphorus loading (Chapra 1977). However, we don’t know the magnitude of land affected by more recent clearcutting, nor its effects on water resources. The purpose of this report is to describe these land use changes and other characteristics of the Minnesota North Shore drainage basin that could potentially affect fluxes of sediment and nutrients into Lake Superior.
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Report date: July 1991
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NRRI Technical Report;NRRI/TR-91-07
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Research funded by the Legislative Commission on Minnesota Resources
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Johnston, Carol A; Bonde, John; Meysembourg, Paul; Allen, Brian; Sales, James. (1991). Land Use and Water Resources in the Minnesota North Shore Drainage Basin. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/187206.
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