A Coastal Pond Studied by Oceanographic Methods
by K. O. Emery
This out of print book has been reprinted by OPET with an additional
chapter. Copies are available through OPET by mail for only $10 per
copy plus $3.00 shipping and handling (click
here to order).
ISBN: 0964885808. Paperback. 111 pages.
Editorial Reviews
Review in the American Littoral Society's "Underwater Naturalist",
Vol.23, No.4 by Dereck Bennett
A Coastal Pond Studied by Oceanographic Methods By K.O. Emery
Epilogue: Oyster Pond - Three Decades of Change By Brian L. Howes
and Stanley R. Hart
Emery's idea was to study a small (60 acre) coastal pond on Cape
Cod near Woods Hole, MA, the way you study the ocean, a cheap model
that would have valuable lessons for both the deepsea and pond students.
His classic work was published originally in 1969 and went through
three printings. But in the mid-eighties local residents and another
generation of scientists began to notice changes in the pond - some
oxygen problems and changes in salinity, nutrients, and both plant
and fish populations. To pinpoint the reasons for change and possibly
reverse them, a Falmouth Pond Watch Program was started in 1987;
this book is the result of their observations and suggestions for
pond management. There is nothing fancy here, just straightforward
descriptions of the pond's topography, fresh/salt water regimes,
nutrient budgets, and the like, mostly physical oceanography aimed
at a body of water barely 10 feet deep. Their conclusion is that
the pond's problems are not caused by the nearby development and
a resultant runoff from septic tanks and stormwater but by increased
salinity, and should be managed with a light hand as a brackish system.
The next steps are anyone's guess; the methods used to get this far
are interesting and applicable elsewhere. But while the techniques
can be duplicated, it would be difficult to gather as august a group
as the Woods Hole scientists and Cape Cod Yankees. You can bet these "Pond
Watchers" took the work seriously - lots of tweed jackets with
elbow patches, pipe smoking, and "hear, hears" as they
wrestled with parts per thousand and coliforms per liter. Their conclusion
is that ponds are worthy of serious study, and this book will serve
others as a model.
Review in "Coastal Research" June 1997, page 7
"A Coastal Pond Studied by Oceanographic Methods" by
K.O. Emery, is a re-issue of a report originally published in 1969.
The subject is Oyster Pond, in Falmouth, Massachusetts, USA. The
history of the pond was traced from pre-European days, into the middle
of the present century. The discussion covers topography, geology
and biology. It summarizes recent findings, and also suggests the
first stages of a corrective management plan. It is available from
Oyster Pond Environmental Trust, P.O. Box 496, Woods Hole, MA 002543-0496,
USA
Book Description
A Coastal Pond Studied by Oceanographic Methods is a reprint
of the classic book of the same name by K.O. Emery, distinguished
scientist at the famous Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI).
This book was first published in 1969 and enjoyed three printings,
but has long since been out of print. This study of Oyster Pond in
Falmouth, MA, traces the pond's history from post glacial, pre-European
and early settler days to the middle of the 20th century and details
the geology, topography,chemistry and biology of the pond in the
late 1960s. In Emery's words, it "was a low-cost backyard operation,
but it cut through much of the whole field of oceanography".
In this reprinting by the Oyster Pond Environmental Trust, Inc.,
the original book was updated with an addendum, Epilogue: Oyster
Pond -- Three Decades of Change, in which Brian Howes and Stanley
R. Hart of the WHOI summarize studies of Oyster Pond conducted during
the years 1987-1997 by the Falmouth Pond Watch Program. This is an
ongoing and cooperative project involving citizen volunteers and
local municipality and research institutions. This decadal Pond Watch
study elucidates the changes that have taken are taking place in
the pond, especially since the large-scale development of housing
in the pond's watershed. The book chronicles thirty years of change
in the pond's vital statistics during a period of rapid expansion
of human activity in its watershed area.
Interested readers will include naturalists, ecologists, environmental
scientists, those living along the shores of other coastal ponds
in the world, and those interested in preserving or restoring the
health of coastal ponds. They will also include teachers and students
at all levels, but especially of the high school and college level
because, as Emery himself stated, "It is hoped
that the examples of low-cost research presented in this study will motivate
budding oceanographers to go beyond the classroom and onto the water".
About the Author
K.O. Emery was the Henry Bryant Bigelow Oceanographer Emeritus at the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution at the date of publication of this edition. He recieved
his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Illinois in 1935 and 1941 respectively.
He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the american Academy of
Arts and Sciences and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He won the Shepard
Prize for Marine Geology in 1969, the Prince Albert Ier de Monaca Medal in 1971,
the AAAS-Rosenstiel Award in Oceanographic Science in 1975, the Maurice Ewing
Award of the American Geophysical Union in 1985, and the Twenhofel Medal of the
Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists in 1989. He received an
honorary D.Sc. degree from the University of Southern California in 1990. He
is author or co-author of about 345 scientific papers and 15 books. K.O., as
he used was called, died in 1998.
Brian L. Howes is Professor at the Center for Marine and Atmospheric
Science and Technology at the Univeristy of Massachusetts, Dartmouth.
He received his B.A. from Rutgers University and his M.A. and Ph.D.
from Boston University. He has been Director of the Falmouth Pond
Watch Program since 1991. He is the author or co-author of 80 publications
and reports. Stanley R. Hart is a Senior Scientist at the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution, and currently holds the Columbus
O'Donnell Iselin Chair of Oceanography. He received his B.S. and
Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technolgy and his M.S.
from the California Institute of Technology. He is a member of
the National Academy of Sciences, and a Fellow of the American
Geophysical Union, the Geological Society of America, the Geochemical
Society and the european Association of Geochemistry. He won the
Goldschmidt Medal of the Geochemical Society in 1992. He is the
author or co-author of 180 scientific papers.
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