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Tampa Bay as a model estuary for examining the impact of human activities on biogeochemical processes: an introduction

January 1, 2007

Tampa Bay is a shallow, Y-shaped coastal embayment that is located along the center of the Florida Platform – an expansive accumulation of Cretaceous–Tertiary shallow-water carbonates and evaporites that were periodically exposed during glacio–eustatic sea level fluctuations. As a consequence, extensive karstification likely had a controlling impact on the geologic evolution of Tampa Bay. Despite its large aerial size (∼ 1000 km2), Tampa Bay is relatively shallow (mean depth = 4 m) and its watershed (6700 km2) is among the smallest in the Gulf of Mexico. About 85% of all freshwater inflow (mean = 63 m3 s-1) to the bay is carried by four principal tributaries (Orlando et al., 1993). Groundwater makes up an important component of baseflow of these coastal streams and may also be important in delivering nutrients and other constituents to the bay proper by submarine groundwater discharge.

Publication Year 2007
Title Tampa Bay as a model estuary for examining the impact of human activities on biogeochemical processes: an introduction
DOI 10.1016/j.marchem.2006.12.009
Authors Peter W. Swarzenski, Mark Baskaran, Carl S. Henderson, Kim Yates
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Marine Chemistry
Index ID 70121032
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coastal and Marine Geology Program