WEBVTT Kind: captions Language: en 00:00:00.499 --> 00:00:01.701 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:00:01.701 --> 00:00:02.325 [RUNNING WATER] 00:00:02.325 --> 00:00:04.040 The mountain streams that we work 00:00:04.040 --> 00:00:06.132 in are small headwater streams. 00:00:06.132 --> 00:00:08.090 You can roll up your pant legs and walk across. 00:00:08.090 --> 00:00:09.320 They're not real big. 00:00:09.320 --> 00:00:11.930 But there's a lot going on beneath the surface. 00:00:11.930 --> 00:00:14.800 There's a lot going on with the life and the chemistry. 00:00:14.800 --> 00:00:17.380 The Shenandoah Watershed Study started in 1979 00:00:17.380 --> 00:00:19.740 as a collaborative project between the University 00:00:19.740 --> 00:00:21.820 of Virginia and the National Park Service, 00:00:21.820 --> 00:00:26.020 and then expanded to streams beyond the park. 00:00:26.020 --> 00:00:27.960 35 years ago, we were just beginning 00:00:27.960 --> 00:00:30.320 to understand the effects that pollutants 00:00:30.320 --> 00:00:31.840 were having on the atmosphere. 00:00:31.840 --> 00:00:33.959 By measuring weekly, water chemistry, 00:00:33.959 --> 00:00:36.000 and understanding the hydrology of these systems, 00:00:36.000 --> 00:00:39.460 we're getting information from the entire watershed. 00:00:39.460 --> 00:00:42.960 Sulfuric acid is one of the components of acid rain 00:00:42.960 --> 00:00:45.040 that changes the pH of the stream system. 00:00:45.040 --> 00:00:49.230 And that change in pH is crucial to facilitating other chemical 00:00:49.230 --> 00:00:51.290 reactions, which impact the habitat 00:00:51.290 --> 00:00:53.160 quality for the fish and everything that 00:00:53.160 --> 00:00:54.780 lives in the stream. 00:00:54.780 --> 00:00:58.240 We also bring in students to pose new questions, 00:00:58.240 --> 00:00:59.700 collect new data, and also, we're 00:00:59.700 --> 00:01:01.158 trying to understand new pollutants 00:01:01.158 --> 00:01:03.670 that we hadn't thought about, back 35 years ago. 00:01:03.670 --> 00:01:05.560 Mercury is a hazardous material. 00:01:05.560 --> 00:01:06.860 It hurts human life. 00:01:06.860 --> 00:01:08.386 It hurts other forms of life. 00:01:08.386 --> 00:01:10.010 And we're going back hundreds of years. 00:01:10.010 --> 00:01:13.440 And we're seeing that as soon as the Industrial Revolution came. 00:01:13.440 --> 00:01:16.110 We see this huge increase. 00:01:16.110 --> 00:01:18.789 We've made a lot of progress, and we've impacted legislation, 00:01:18.789 --> 00:01:20.330 and we have cleaned up the atmosphere 00:01:20.330 --> 00:01:21.890 for targeted pollutants. 00:01:21.890 --> 00:01:24.250 But we're not back to the natural health 00:01:24.250 --> 00:01:25.270 of these systems. 00:01:25.270 --> 00:01:27.590 35 Years ago, we didn't know what was going on 00:01:27.590 --> 00:01:28.550 in this environment. 00:01:28.550 --> 00:01:30.230 We have a much better understanding 00:01:30.230 --> 00:01:32.810 of what the impacts are of acid deposition, 00:01:32.810 --> 00:01:34.900 and how different streams recover differently, 00:01:34.900 --> 00:01:36.130 and why that is. 00:01:36.130 --> 00:01:39.210 But it also gives us the understanding to move forward, 00:01:39.210 --> 00:01:42.320 to be prepared to answer the next emerging questions. 00:01:42.320 --> 00:01:46.570 [MUSIC PLAYING]