Victoria Glenn Christensen, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 52
Techniques for estimating the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on small streams in the binational U.S. and Canadian Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada, based on data through water year 2013 Techniques for estimating the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on small streams in the binational U.S. and Canadian Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada, based on data through water year 2013
A binational study was initiated to update statistical equations that are used to estimate the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on streams in Manitoba and Ontario, Canada, and Minnesota that are contained within the binational Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada. Hydraulic engineers use peak streamflow data to inform designs of bridges, culverts...
Authors
Chris Sanocki, Tara Williams-Sether, Peter A. Steeves, Victoria G. Christensen
Sediment oxygen demand: A review of in situ methods Sediment oxygen demand: A review of in situ methods
Sediment oxygen demand (SOD) plays a fundamental role in biological and chemical processes within the benthic layer of a water body. Land use, including agricultural land use, can affect SOD. However, a wide variety of approaches have been used for in situ SOD chamber construction and data collection, and modelers frequently use SOD values from the literature, without consideration of...
Authors
Erin N. Coenen, Victoria G. Christensen, Lynn Bartsch, Rebecca M. Kreiling, William B. Richardson
Voyageurs National Park: Water-level regulation and effects on water quality and aquatic biology Voyageurs National Park: Water-level regulation and effects on water quality and aquatic biology
Following dam installations in the remote Rainy Lake Basin during the early 1900s, water-level fluctuations were considered extreme (1914–1949) compared to more natural conditions. In 1949, the International Joint Commission (IJC), which sets rules governing dam operation on waters shared by the United States and Canada, established the first rule curves to regulate water levels on these
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Ryan P. Maki, Jaime F. LeDuc
A history of trade routes and water-level regulation on waterways in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA A history of trade routes and water-level regulation on waterways in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA
Unlike most national parks, main access to Voyageurs National Park is by boat. This remote system of interconnected waterways along the USA-Canada border was an important transportation route for thousands of years of American Indian occupation, leading up to and including the trade route of the voyageurs, or French-Canadian fur traders from around 1680 to 1870. The Ojibwe people...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Andrew E. LaBounty
Lake levels and water quality in comparison to fish mercury body burdens, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, 2013–15 Lake levels and water quality in comparison to fish mercury body burdens, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, 2013–15
Within Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota, lake levels are controlled by a series of dams to support a variety of uses. Previous research indicates a link between these artificially maintained water levels, referred to as rule curves, and mercury concentrations in fish owing to the drying and rewetting of wetlands and other nearshore areas, which may release methylmercury into the...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, James H. Larson, Ryan P. Maki, Mark B. Sandheinrich, Mark E. Brigham, Claire Kissane, Jamie F. LeDuc
Migratory bird habitat in relation to tile drainage and poorly drained hydrologic soil groups Migratory bird habitat in relation to tile drainage and poorly drained hydrologic soil groups
The Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) is home to more than 50% of the migratory waterfowl in North America. Although the PPR provides an abundance of temporary and permanent wetlands for nesting and feeding, increases in commodity prices and agricultural drainage practices have led to a trend of wetland drainage. The Northern Shoveler is a migratory dabbling duck species that uses wetland...
Authors
Brandi Kastner, Victoria G. Christensen, Tanja N. Williamson, Christopher A. Sanocki
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 52
Techniques for estimating the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on small streams in the binational U.S. and Canadian Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada, based on data through water year 2013 Techniques for estimating the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on small streams in the binational U.S. and Canadian Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada, based on data through water year 2013
A binational study was initiated to update statistical equations that are used to estimate the magnitude and frequency of peak flows on streams in Manitoba and Ontario, Canada, and Minnesota that are contained within the binational Lake of the Woods–Rainy River Basin upstream from Kenora, Ontario, Canada. Hydraulic engineers use peak streamflow data to inform designs of bridges, culverts...
Authors
Chris Sanocki, Tara Williams-Sether, Peter A. Steeves, Victoria G. Christensen
Sediment oxygen demand: A review of in situ methods Sediment oxygen demand: A review of in situ methods
Sediment oxygen demand (SOD) plays a fundamental role in biological and chemical processes within the benthic layer of a water body. Land use, including agricultural land use, can affect SOD. However, a wide variety of approaches have been used for in situ SOD chamber construction and data collection, and modelers frequently use SOD values from the literature, without consideration of...
Authors
Erin N. Coenen, Victoria G. Christensen, Lynn Bartsch, Rebecca M. Kreiling, William B. Richardson
Voyageurs National Park: Water-level regulation and effects on water quality and aquatic biology Voyageurs National Park: Water-level regulation and effects on water quality and aquatic biology
Following dam installations in the remote Rainy Lake Basin during the early 1900s, water-level fluctuations were considered extreme (1914–1949) compared to more natural conditions. In 1949, the International Joint Commission (IJC), which sets rules governing dam operation on waters shared by the United States and Canada, established the first rule curves to regulate water levels on these
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Ryan P. Maki, Jaime F. LeDuc
A history of trade routes and water-level regulation on waterways in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA A history of trade routes and water-level regulation on waterways in Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, USA
Unlike most national parks, main access to Voyageurs National Park is by boat. This remote system of interconnected waterways along the USA-Canada border was an important transportation route for thousands of years of American Indian occupation, leading up to and including the trade route of the voyageurs, or French-Canadian fur traders from around 1680 to 1870. The Ojibwe people...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Andrew E. LaBounty
Lake levels and water quality in comparison to fish mercury body burdens, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, 2013–15 Lake levels and water quality in comparison to fish mercury body burdens, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, 2013–15
Within Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota, lake levels are controlled by a series of dams to support a variety of uses. Previous research indicates a link between these artificially maintained water levels, referred to as rule curves, and mercury concentrations in fish owing to the drying and rewetting of wetlands and other nearshore areas, which may release methylmercury into the...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, James H. Larson, Ryan P. Maki, Mark B. Sandheinrich, Mark E. Brigham, Claire Kissane, Jamie F. LeDuc
Migratory bird habitat in relation to tile drainage and poorly drained hydrologic soil groups Migratory bird habitat in relation to tile drainage and poorly drained hydrologic soil groups
The Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) is home to more than 50% of the migratory waterfowl in North America. Although the PPR provides an abundance of temporary and permanent wetlands for nesting and feeding, increases in commodity prices and agricultural drainage practices have led to a trend of wetland drainage. The Northern Shoveler is a migratory dabbling duck species that uses wetland...
Authors
Brandi Kastner, Victoria G. Christensen, Tanja N. Williamson, Christopher A. Sanocki