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Ten Mile Creek is a small, predominantly agricultural and forested watershed located to the west of Clarksburg, Maryland, in an area that has experienced land-use change and urban development over the past decade. Additional development extending into the Ten Mile Creek watershed is planned over the next several years.
This planned development in the Ten Mile Creek watershed presents an opportunity to monitor the surface-water hydrology and stream geomorphology before, during, and after the development to assess watershed responses over time.
Start Date: June 1, 2013
End Date: September 30, 2018
Partners:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection
Project Lead: Matt Baker and Ed Doheny
Objectives
The objective of the study is to track and quantify watershed response over time to changes in land use caused by development in the watershed.
Approach
Two active USGS stream gages are located on the main stem of Ten Mile Creek: 01644388, Ten Mile Creek near Clarksburg, MD; 01644390, Ten Mile Creek near Boyds, MD. The gages are being supplemented with a geomorphic monitoring reach, which will allow the collection of channel-geometry data from designated cross sections, channel-alignment and orientation data along longitudinal profiles, and from pebble counts through the reach.
The stream gage data will also be augmented by data from a series of fixed-location crest-stage gages which will be used to compute peak flows that are not quantified by direct measurement. These data will also allow USGS to perform analyses of changes in boundary-shear stress conditions experienced by streambed sediments.
Two continuous-record precipitation gages are also being installed in the watershed to track the spatial distribution and intensity of rainfall in the watershed.
Ten Mile Creek is a small, predominantly agricultural and forested watershed located to the west of Clarksburg, Maryland, in an area that has experienced land-use change and urban development over the past decade. Additional development extending into the Ten Mile Creek watershed is planned over the next several years.
This planned development in the Ten Mile Creek watershed presents an opportunity to monitor the surface-water hydrology and stream geomorphology before, during, and after the development to assess watershed responses over time.
Start Date: June 1, 2013
End Date: September 30, 2018
Partners:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection
Project Lead: Matt Baker and Ed Doheny
Objectives
The objective of the study is to track and quantify watershed response over time to changes in land use caused by development in the watershed.
Approach
Two active USGS stream gages are located on the main stem of Ten Mile Creek: 01644388, Ten Mile Creek near Clarksburg, MD; 01644390, Ten Mile Creek near Boyds, MD. The gages are being supplemented with a geomorphic monitoring reach, which will allow the collection of channel-geometry data from designated cross sections, channel-alignment and orientation data along longitudinal profiles, and from pebble counts through the reach.
The stream gage data will also be augmented by data from a series of fixed-location crest-stage gages which will be used to compute peak flows that are not quantified by direct measurement. These data will also allow USGS to perform analyses of changes in boundary-shear stress conditions experienced by streambed sediments.
Two continuous-record precipitation gages are also being installed in the watershed to track the spatial distribution and intensity of rainfall in the watershed.