Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 1660 OF 1781

Main Title Total Maximum Daily Load of Mercury for Tuckahoe Lake Caroline County, Maryland.
CORP Author Maryland Dept. of the Environment, Baltimore.; Environmental Protection Agency, Philadelphia, PA. Region III.
Year Published 2002
Stock Number PB2014-102469
Additional Subjects Mercury(Metal) ; Economic analysis ; Maryland ; Costs ; Mining ; Water pollution ; Watersh eds ; Caroline County(Maryland)
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
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Status
NTIS  PB2014-102469 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 52p
Abstract
Tuckahoe Lake is an impoundment in the Tuckahoe River Watershed (basin code 02-13- 04-05) in southwestern Caroline County, Maryland. Tuckahoe Lake was identified on the State of Marylands draft 2002 list of Water Quality Limited Segments (303(d) list) (submitted October 4, 2002) as impaired by mercury contamination, based on data for mercury concentrations in fish tissue. Mercury concentrations in the water are well below the threshold for concern in regard for drinking water. The Maryland water quality standards Surface Water Use Designation (Code of Maryland Regulations (COMAR 26.08.02.07)) for Tuckahoe Lake is Use I Water Contact Recreation and Protection of Aquatic Life. The Maryland Department of the Environments (MDE) current public fish consumption advisory to eat limited amounts of fish from Tuckahoe Lake is not supportive of this use. Therefore, this document proposes to establish a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for mercury in Tuckahoe Lake. The methodology used to compute this mercury TMDL consists of two broad steps. The first step is to determine a maximum Allowable Ambient Water Column Concentration (AAWCC) of mercury in the water column that ensures the bioaccumulation of the total mercury by fish will remain below a maximum fish tissue concentration. The second step is to determine a maximum allowable load that is consistent with the maximum water column concentration. The resultant TMDL includes a Load Allocation (LA), a Waste Load Allocation (WLA), margin of safety (MOS) and a Future Allocation (FA). The TMDL methodology considers all sources, including direct atmospheric deposition to the surface of the lake, nonpoint source contributions from the watershed, and point source contributions.