MAKE A MEME View Large Image Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell joined Interior, state and local officials and partners at the Hughesville Dam removal on the Musconetcong River. The removal of the Hughesville Dam is part of a larger collaborative effort to restore ...
View Original:Secretary_Jewell_speaks_at_the_Hughesville_Dam_removal_event_on_September_8,_2016.jpg (5184x3456)
Download: Original    Medium    Small Thumb
Courtesy of:www.flickr.com More Like This
Keywords: hurricanesandyproject94 hurricanesandyproject94a dams dam removal damremoval aquatic connectivity aquaticconnectivity rivers new jersey newjersey hurricanesandyfws outdoor people U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell joined Interior, state and local officials and partners at the Hughesville Dam removal on the Musconetcong River. The removal of the Hughesville Dam is part of a larger collaborative effort to restore the 42-mile Musconetcong – a designated “Wild and Scenic River” – to a free-flowing state. Hughesville is the fifth dam to be removed, helping to open up fish passage while improving safety and flooding risks for the local community. The project is one of a dozen dam removals in the Northeast supported by federal funding for Hurricane Sandy recovery to help strengthen natural defenses along the Atlantic Coast and protect communities and wildlife against future storms predicted with a changing climate. Photo credit: Katie Conrad/USFWS Press Release: bit.ly/2dfWlMR More about the Hughesville Dam project: www.fws.gov/hurricane/sandy/projects/NJDamRemoval.html Read about all Hurriane Sandy resiliency projects: www.fws.gov/hurricane/sandy/projects.html U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell joined Interior, state and local officials and partners at the Hughesville Dam removal on the Musconetcong River. The removal of the Hughesville Dam is part of a larger collaborative effort to restore the 42-mile Musconetcong – a designated “Wild and Scenic River” – to a free-flowing state. Hughesville is the fifth dam to be removed, helping to open up fish passage while improving safety and flooding risks for the local community. The project is one of a dozen dam removals in the Northeast supported by federal funding for Hurricane Sandy recovery to help strengthen natural defenses along the Atlantic Coast and protect communities and wildlife against future storms predicted with a changing climate. Photo credit: Katie Conrad/USFWS Press Release: bit.ly/2dfWlMR More about the Hughesville Dam project: www.fws.gov/hurricane/sandy/projects/NJDamRemoval.html Read about all Hurriane Sandy resiliency projects: www.fws.gov/hurricane/sandy/projects.html
Terms of Use   Search of the Day