The Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Environmental Sciences Division
initiated the Walker Branch Watershed Project on the Oak Ridge
Reservation in east Tennessee in 1967, with the support of the U. S.
Department of Energy's Office of Health and Environmental Research
(DOE/OHER), to quantify land-water interactions in a forested landscape.
It was designed to focus on three principal objectives: (1) to develop
baseline data on unpolluted ecosystems, (2) to contribute to our
knowledge of cycling and loss of chemical elements in natural
ecosystems, and (3) to provide the understanding necessary for the
construction of mathe- matical simulation models for predicting the
effects of man's activities on forested landscapes. In 1969, the
International Biological Program's Eastern Deciduous Forest Biome
Project was initiated, and Walker Branch Watershed was chosen as one of
several sites for intensive research on nutrient cycling and biological
productivity. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation
(NSF). Over the next 4 years, intensive process-level research on
primary productivity, decomposition, and belowground biological
processes was coupled with ongoing DOE-supported work on the
characterization of basic geology and hydrological cycles on the
watershed. In 1974, the NSF's RANN Program (Research Applied to National
Needs) began work on trace element cycling on Walker Branch Wa- tershed
because of the extensive data base being developed under both DOE and
NSF support.