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Riverbank erosion, causing soil and vegetation to collapse into river. - Development/Infrastructure - Photo (JPG)


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Home > Human > Development/Infrastructure
Riverbank erosion, causing soil and vegetation to collapse into river.
The combination of property owners removing riverfront vegetation and passing boat wakes, both commercial and recreational, can lead to bank erosion and the collapse of soil and trees into the waterways.

Riverbank erosion, causing soil and vegetation to collapse into river. The combination of property owners removing riverfront vegetation and passing boat wakes, both commercial and recreational, can lead to bank erosion and the collapse of soil and trees into the waterways. stream,erosion,loss,of,buffer zone,sedimentation,nutrient,pollution

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Riverbank erosion, causing soil and vegetation to collapse into river.
The combination of property owners removing riverfront vegetation and passing boat wakes, both commercial and recreational, can lead to bank erosion and the collapse of soil and trees into the waterways.
Waterfront fuel depot storage tanks and crab boat. Historically and currently, Easton Point has industrial waterfront activities such as fuel sales, delivery and storage, and gravel depots for asphalt production. A waterman's coop is also located here for the marketing of Maryland blue crabs.
May 2005, Tred Avon River, Easton, MD industry,hydrocarbon,metal,oil,grease,pollution,brownfield,runoff,sedimentation,crab,waterman Waterfront home construction. This home under construction is situated in a pine forest. A silt fence has been installed in an attempt to prevent sedimentation into the wetlands. Unfortunately, even a building setback does little to prevent septic systems from failing due to frequent flooding and nutrient-laden runoff into the river.
May 2005, Tred Avon River, Easton, MD suburban,development,encroachment,nutrient,pollution,sedimentation Waterfront home construction. This home under construction is situated in a pine forest. A silt fence has been installed in an attempt to prevent sedimentation into the wetlands. Unfortunately, even a building setback does little to prevent septic systems from failing due to frequent flooding and nutrient-laden runoff into the river.
May 2005, Tred Avon River, Easton, MD suburban,development,encroachment,nutrient,pollution,sedimentation Riverbank erosion, causing soil and vegetation to collapse into river. The combination of property owners removing riverfront vegetation and passing boat wakes, both commercial and recreational, can lead to bank erosion and the collapse of soil and trees into the waterways. stream,erosion,loss,of,buffer zone,sedimentation,nutrient,pollution Asphalt production plant's waterfront depot, empty gravel barge and crane. The >300' fully loaded gravel barges are pushed up-river by tugboats to this waterfront depot where the gravel is unloaded and hot mixed to produce road asphalt. The negative riparian impacts are: 1) the prop dredging of the river by the tug pushing oversized barges, resuspending the toxic benthic sediments; 2) streambank erosion from tug wake, and 3) stormwater runoff potentially laden with toxic hydrocarbons, oils, greases and metals.
North Fork of the Tred Avon River, Easton, MD waterfront,industry,pollution,negative,environmental,impact New home construction and rip-rap shoreline replaces natural wetlands and forest buffer. The edge of the forest buffer and marsh is visible on the right side of this photo. This home is part of a large residential development of former farmlands and waterfront estate grounds.
May 2005, Tred Avon River, Easton, MD house,development,encroachment,wetland,loss,urban,impact
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File information
Filename:iil-ian-jh-0029.jpg
Album name:hawkey / Development/Infrastructure
Rating (2 votes):
Keywords: stream, erosion, loss, of, buffer zone, sedimentation, nutrient, pollution
Author Name:Jane Hawkey
Author Company:IAN/UMCES
Date created (MM/DD/YYYY):05/00/05
Media Type:Photo
File Size:2006 KB
Date added:Jun 27, 2005
Dimensions:2560 x 1920 pixels
Displayed:449 times
Downloaded:21 times (Details)
Image Description:May 2005, Tred Avon River, Easton, MD
Color Space:sRGB
Components Configuration:YCbCr
Compressed Bits Per Pixel:1
Contrast:0
Customer Render:0
Date Time:2005:06:22 11:28:46
DateTime Original:2005:06:05 03:07:31
DateTime digitized:2005:06:05 03:07:31
Digital Zoom Ratio:0
Exif Image Height:1920 pixels
Exif Image Width:2560 pixels
Exif Offset:276
Exif Version:version 2.2
Exposure Bias:0 EV
Exposure Mode:0
Exposure Program:Program
Exposure Time:1/317 sec
FNumber:f 5
File Source:Digital Still Camera
Flash:No Flash
Flash Pix Version:version 1
Focal length:44.7 mm
Gain Control:0
ISO:100
Light Source:Unknown or Auto
Make:NIKON
Max Aperture:f 2.8
Metering Mode:Multi-Segment
Model:E5700
Orientation:Normal (O deg)
Resolution Unit:Inch
Saturation:0
Scene Capture Mode:0
Scene Type:Directly Photographed
Sharpness:0
Software:Adobe Photoshop 7.0
White Balance:0
X Resolution:300 dots per ResolutionUnit
Y Resolution:300 dots per ResolutionUnit
YCbCrPositioning:Datum Point
IPTC Title:Shoreline erosion.
URL:http://ian.umces.edu/imagelibrary/displayimage-102.html
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Please note: The IAN/UMCES Symbol and Image Libraries are provided completely cost and royalty free for any use, with attribution, except redistribution or sales. Required Attribution: Author Name, Integration and Application Network, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (ian.umces.edu/imagelibrary/).