Hach CEL Advanced Portable Laboratory Kit
The Hach CEL Advanced Portable Laboratory Kit includes instrumentation and reagents to test for more than 20 parameters.
Features
- Versatile for use in the lab or for field testing
- Rugged carrying case is durable and portable
- Pre-measured reagents are impervious to environmental contamination
- Free ground shipping
- Expedited repair and warranty service
- Lifetime technical support
- More
This versatile and portable laboratory kit is a fully configured system that meets the most demanding sampling needs. Including a full complement of instruments and reagent sets for more than 20 parameters, the kit is ideal for quick on-site results. Rapid testing provides quick results that can be communicated to decision makers.
- (1) DR900 Colorimeter
- (1) HQ40d Multi-Meter
- (1) PHC201 pH Electrode with 1 Meter Cable
- (1) CDC401 Conductivity Probe with 1 Meter Cable
- (1) Digital Titrator
- (1) Manual
- (1) Procedure Manual CD
- (1) Apparatus
- (1) Carrying Case
In The News
Early results from Colorado River water pulse promising for parched delta
On March 23, 2014, a pulse of water 130 million cubic meters in volume flowed from the Morelos Dam just south of the U.S. - Mexico border through the lower Colorado River delta. Part of a hydrological experiment unprecedented in scale, the release was designed to bring temporary — but hopefully telling — relief to the parched delta. With the earliest results coming in from the ongoing project, researchers are beginning to understand just how beneficial a (relatively) small water pulse can benefit a water-starved region. 
 
Getting the water downriver necessitated more than just an open floodgate. Universities, government agencies and nongovernmental organizations came together from both sides of the border to prepare for the pulse, and to monitor its continual impact.
Read MoreBeaufort Sea study seeks to prospect and protect complex Arctic ecosystem
The Arctic has become the target of some ironic attention lately. While part of the international community eyes the region as a climate change indicator, many other entities have set their gaze on the oil and gas reserves that could fuel such change. Now a collaboration between federal and private sector organizations, as well as U.S. and Canadian scientists, seeks to uncover the workings of the Arctic Beaufort Sea ecosystem so that its potential for human use is understood alongside the requirements for its protection. 
 
Being the federal agency responsible for offshore energy development, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is leading the Marine Arctic Ecosystem Study with help from the other nine members of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program.
Read MoreIn Sierra Nevada streams, researchers on the lookout for drought-threatened fish
In the parched hills of the Sierra Nevada, researchers are surveying drought-weakened streams to see what effects long-term dryness is having on fish populations in the region. Their findings so far have been less than stellar, with sparse numbers of fish being counted. 
 
Still, as data collection is progressing, the researchers, who work out of the University of California, Davis’ Center for Watershed Sciences, are gathering insights that could aid in conservation efforts that are expected to grapple with coming climate changes. 
 
The purposes of the investigation are two-fold. “If we ever get rain again, we want to see how well these areas are recovering from drought,” said Rebecca Quinones, a postdoctoral researcher at the center and leader of the project.
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