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ARS Home » Midwest Area » West Lafayette, Indiana » National Soil Erosion Research Laboratory » Research » Research Projects Subjects of Investigation at this Location

Research Projects Subjects of Investigation at this Location

Each ARS research project has related subjects of investigation.  Listed below are the subjects of investigation currently conducted at this location.

Clicking on a subject of investigation will list the research projects within that  subject of investigation.

Subjects of Investigation
Climate
Corn (for sweetcorn use 1480)
Drainage and irrigation facilities and systems
Soil and land, general
Soybean
Water resources
Watersheds
Weather
Research Projects within Watersheds
item Assessment of Sediment and Chemical Transport Processes for Developing and Improving Agricultural Conservation Practices
item Assessment of Sediment and Chemical Transport Processes for Developing and Improving Agricultural Conservation Practices
item Contribution of Legacy P to Watershed Outcomes - Phase 1 - NSEU
item Contribution of Legacy Phosphorus to Watershed Outcomes Phase 3- Stream Sediments - W Layayette
item FY 2021 Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) - Benchmark Watershed Assessment Studies (on Croplands) - NSE
item FY 2022 Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) - Benchmark Watershed Assessment Studies (on croplands), NSEU
item Improving Understanding of Soil Processes for Making More Informed Agricultural Management Decisions that Increase Agricultural Sustainability in the Central U.S.
item IRA GHG Quantification Action Area #6 (M#6)- Improve temporal and spatial coverage of national conservation activity data - West Lafayette, IN
item Legacy phosphorus assessment in the Western Lake Erie Basin – Phase 2 (FY25 Purdue)
item Legacy Phosphorus Assessment in the Western Lake Erie Basin – Phase 2 (FY25 UK)
item Legacy Phosphorus Assessment in the Western Lake Erie Basin – Phase II: Examining the Interaction between Soil Chemistry and Hydrology
item Optimizing Phosphorus Removal Structures: Improvements for Existing Structures and Identifying Next-Generation Designs