Salt water from the ocean is starting to creep into the Delaware River Basin due to intensifying drought and sea level rise, ...
Drought and rising sea levels allow saltwater to creep closer to drinking water supplies for over 14 million residents in New ...
Drought and sea level rise are causing salty oceanwater to creep into the Delaware River, threatening a source of drinking ...
The Delaware River Basin Commission is holding a virtual meeting Tuesday as it considers next steps to address drought ...
The region faces about a 10-inch deficit in rainfall. Three to four inches of rain a month are typical during the winter.
The Delaware River's drinking water risks contamination as a salt front moves upstream, with reservoir releases trying to ...
Unfortunately, computer models are indicating strongly that nature is going to serve up a turkey for Thursday with a chilly, ...
"For grapes, if it's dry starting in August and then running through the entire harvest season, that's really good," Sharrott ...
The salt line on the Delaware is 20 miles north of where it should be this time of year. Should we be worried?
Salty oceanwater is creeping up the Delaware River, the source for much of the drinking water for Philadelphia and millions of others, brought on by drought conditions and sea level rise ...
including most of Philadelphia but also New Jersey and New York. Still, the line is south of those intakes and below the level it traveled in the 1960s during record drought conditions.