|
Frank Magilligan,
Dartmouth: LIDAR Imagery of Ashuelot Drives Dam Removal Insight November 7, 2011
Time can take its toll on a dam. As dams age, they are more costly to
repair and the risk of a catastrophic dam break increases--putting
property and lives at risk. But, removing them can mean big changes to
the community, and the environment.
Frank Magilligan,
Dartmouth
"A lot of communities now are trying to wrestle with the decision of
whether or not to support dam removal. And part of that uncertainty is
our lack of scientific knowledge of what's going to happen when you take
a dam out," says Dartmouth College geographer Frank Magilligan.
With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), Magilligan
studies river systems to learn how dam removal might affect them. His
"lab" has been the relatively small Homestead Dam along the Ashuelot
River in Swanzey, N. H., 60 miles south of his campus office. The
Homestead Dam was built more than 200 years ago along the Ashuelot. It's
long outlived its purpose, once serving as a power source for a local
mill that is long gone.
|