2019-20 AEESP Distinguished Lecturer

Diane M. McKnight, Ph.D.
Civil and Environmental and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA
Lecture Tour Dates
September 2019 through April 2020

About Professor McKnight: Diane M. McKnight is a Professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, a member of the Environmental Engineering program faculty and a Fellow of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado. Her research focuses on the coupling of hydrology and water quality in streams and lakes, and the consequences for aquatic ecosystems and water supplies. She began her career as a research hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, studying the biogeochemistry of lakes in the blast zone of Mt. St. Helens and acid mine drainage streams and pristine alpine lakes in the Rocky Mountains. She participated in designing ecological aspects of the National Water Quality Assessment Program of the USGS. Since 1992, she has conducted research on stream ecosystems as part of the McMurdo Dry Valleys Long-Term Ecological Research (MCM-LTER) project in Antarctica. She has been President of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography and editor of Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences. She served as the Chair of the Editorial Committee for the LTER Schoolyard Children’s Book Series and authored the second book in the series. She is a fellow of the American Geophysical Union, a member of the National Academy of Engineering and received the John Dalton Award from the European Geophysical Union in 2015.

Lecture Topics

Professor McKnight will present two lectures in the 2019-2020 Tour:

Lecture 1: "A biogeochemical perspective on the reactivity of dissolved organic matter in natural waters: from Antarctica to the Arctic"

Abstract: "In natural waters, dissolved organic matter (DOM) is ubiquitous and is comprised of compounds derived from degradation of both plant and microbial precursor organic materials. A current trend is that DOM concentrations in lakes and streams are increasing in north temperate regions and the Arctic, which is referred to as “browning” of natural waters, and reflects greater DOM runoff in watersheds. In addition to watershed DOM sources, DOM is produced by plants growing in the nearshore zone of lakes and rivers, and by algae growing in the water column or on the streambed. With the earlier loss of ice-cover in the northern hemisphere, algal growth is starting sooner and algal DOM production is becoming a more important source of DOM. In turn, the concentration and chemical quality of DOM influence the productivity of these aquatic ecosystems. For example, light absorption by the yellow-colored humic fraction of DOM controls the depth of the photic zone, where algae have enough light to grow, and acts as a sunscreen controlling the UV stress due on aquatic biota. DOM is of interest to environmental engineers for several reasons. For example, the transport of trace metals and organic pollutants and the production of disinfection by products in drinking water treatment can be controlled by interactions with DOM. Further, environmental engineers use similar methods for chemical characterization of DOM as biogeochemists and aquatic ecologists, although these research communities address different questions. This talk will discuss how an understanding of ecological and biogeochemical processes in lakes and streams can provide useful complementary insight beyond chemical characterization to understand and manage current environmental engineering issues involving DOM. Examples will be presented of studies conducted in diverse settings, such as the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica, the Okavango Delta in Botswana, and the arctic tundra in Alaska."

Lecture 2: "Trouble Ahead, Trouble Behind: Acid Mine Drainage and Climate Change in the Rocky Mountains"

Abstract: "In the Rocky Mountain watersheds, weathering of disseminated pyrite in the country rock and in mining workings generates acidic, metal-enriched water that drains into streams and rivers. This overall process is referred to as acid rock drainage (ARD). ARD is a long-term and pervasive environmental problem in the Rocky Mountains and the Sierras, which provide water supply for communities and agriculture throughout the south western US. Contamination has not abated since the mining boom ended about 70 years ago, largely because these contaminants are continuously generated from the exposure to oxygen of pyrite in the mine workings and tailings. Typically these streams have high dissolved concentrations of toxic metals, such as Zn, Cu, Cd and Pb, and their streambeds are covered with iron and aluminum oxides. These streams and rivers support species-poor aquatic ecosystems, and fish are typically absent. A study in an ARD stream system that drains into Dillon Reservoir, a water supply for Denver, Colorado, has found that acidity and concentrations of metals and rare earth elements have been steadily increasing in the summer and fall over the past several decades. Another trend is that mountain resorts have been pursuing a “four seasons resort” approach to adapt to changing climate, and less reliable winter snowpack for skiing. ARD thwarts these plans by constraining the use of stream water for snowmaking and impacting summer recreation, such as fishing and rafting. In addition to general environmental concerns, this situation has focused attention on remediation of abandoned mines which is inherently challenging, as illustrated by the difficulties in remediating the Gold King Mine near Durango, CO. One issue for state and federal agencies and watershed stakeholders’ groups is determining which of the many abandoned mines in a catchment are the main ARD sources, and which of these are suitable for remediation. Addressing the ARD problem in mountain catchments will require a convergent research approach that integrates understanding of hydrology, water quality and aquatic ecosystem processes within a regulatory and water resources framework."

 

Fall/Spring 2019-20 Schedule

For additional information, please contact Debora F. Rodrigues, Ph.D., Chair of the AEESP Lecturers Committee (dfrigiro@central.uh.edu).

Date Host School Co-Host School(s) Contact
FALL 2019
Oct.
19
University of Missouri Missouri University of Science and Technology; Washington University at St. Louis; Southern Illinois University - Carbondale; Southern Illinois University - Edwardsville Baolin Deng, dengb@missouri.edu
Oct.
21
Washington University at St. Louis Missouri University of Science and Technology; Southern Illinois University - Edwardsville Daniel Giammar, giammar@wustl.edu
Oct.
22
Missouri University of Science & Technology N/A. Dev Niyogi, niyogid@mst.edu
Nov.
1
University of Minnesota - Twin Cities St. Thomas University; St. Cloud State University; North Dakota State University; Gustavus Adolphus College; University of Minnesota-Duluth Bill Arnold, arnol032@umn.edu
Nov.
6
Michigan Technological University University of Minnesota-Duluth; Northern Michigan University; University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point; University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh Alex Mayer, asmayer@mtu.edu
Nov.
15
University of Florida University of Central Florida, University of South Florida Andreia Fonseca de Faria, andreia.faria@essie.ufl.edu
Nov.
18
Northern Arizona University University of Arizona; Arizona State University Terry Baxter, terry.baxter@nau.edu
Nov.
22
Texas A&M University University of Texas at Austin; Rice University; University of Houston Shankar Chellam, chellam@tamu.edu
SPRING 2020
Week of Feb. 10* Carnegie Mellon University University of Pittsburgh David Dzombak, dzombak@cmu.edu
Feb.
18
Duke University North Carolina State University; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; North Carolina Central University Helen Hsu-Kim, hsukim@duke.edu
Feb.
21
Purdue University Purdue University Northwest; Purdue University at Fort Wayne; University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana; University of Notre Dame George Zhou, zhizhou@purdue.edu
Feb.
25
University of Wisconsin-Madison Marquette University; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Andrea Hicks, hicks5@wisc.edu
Feb.
28
Northwestern University Loyola University; Marquette University; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee George Wells, george.wells@northwestern.edu
Mar.
4
Rutgers University Princeton University, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Stevens Institute of Technology; Columbia University; New York University; Temple University; Raritan Valley Community College, Rowan University; Hofstra University Nicole Fahrenfeld, nfahrenf@rutgers.edu
Mar.
5-6*
University of Connecticut University of Massachusetts, University of Rhode Island; Yale University; Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Northeastern University Tim Vadas, vadas@engr.uconn.edu
Week of
Mar. 16*
University of Michigan Michigan State University; University of Toledo; Wayne State University Lutgarde Raskin, raskin@umich.edu
Week of
Mar. 16*
Michigan State University University of Michigan; Wayne State University; Western Michigan University; Grand Valley State University Susan Masten, masten@egr.msu.edu
April
8
University of Toronto York University; Ryerson University Elodie Passeport, elodie.passeport@utoronto.ca
April
10
Syracuse University Clarkson University; Colgate University; Cornell University; SUNY-Buffalo; SUNY-ESF Cliff Davidson, davidson@syr.edu
(TBA)* Howard University Johns Hopkins University; University of Maryland Baltimore County; University of Maryland College Park Kimberly Jones, kljones@howard.edu

*Actual date to be confirmed.  This page will be updated upon confirmation.