DescriptionThis is the quarterly publication of the Great Swamp Watershed Association (GSWA), a nonprofit watershed association working to protect the ecological, historic, and cultural integrity of the Great...
DescriptionThe Hackensack River and its associated wetlands have been greatly impacted by man. Construction of a dam at Oradell has greatly altered the original river hydrology, and consequently it no longer...
DescriptionEstuary News is published quarterly by the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, a private, nonprofit organization established in 1996. The Partnership leads collaborative and creative efforts to...
DescriptionThis report presents a commercial development program for the Martin-Marietta site on the Arthur Kill waterfront in Elizabeth. The study considers development potential and optimum development...
DescriptionThe 1979 Aerial Colony Nesting Waterbird Survey represents the third consecutive year that personnel of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection have conducted research to locate, census,...
DescriptionIn presenting its annual report for 1908, the New Jersey State Museum is carrying out the plan laid out by the Commission and the Curator, to make the Museum reports on the same plan as the Museum was...
DescriptionThis is Progress Report No. 5 for work on the Combined Sewage Pollution Abatement Facilities Plan for Elizabeth, prepared by Clinton Bogert Associates, Consulting Engineers. The report contains texts,...
DescriptionThis is Progress Report No. 6 for work on the Combined Sewage Pollution Abatement Facilities Plan for Elizabeth, prepared by Clinton Bogert Associates, Consulting Engineers. The report contains...
DescriptionThe study area in this report is the shallow water area of the Delaware River Estuary from Reedy Point, Delaware to the head of tide at Trenton, New Jersey. Shallow water areas are defined as those...
DescriptionMap covers area from Middle Marsh Creek to Fishers Point along Delaware River. Map shows the location for a channel 600 feet wide and 30 feet deep at mean low water.