The U.S. Geological Survey in Maryland, Delaware, and Washington, D.C.USGS Fact Sheet FS 2004-3004
Water Resources
Information about the quantity and quality of water is vital to local governments and citizens. Floods and droughts affect all sectors of the economy, and threaten public safety. In cooperation with State and local Governments, the USGS collects streamflow data from about 140 gaging stations and ground-water data from nearly 380 wells in Maryland, Delaware, and Washington, D.C. Hydrologic conditions at many of these locations can be viewed in real-time over the web at: http://md.water.usgs.gov/.
NAWQA
Department of Defense Programs
Urban Sprawl
WMATA
Urban Hydrology Chesapeake Bay Program
The Chesapeake Bay, the Nation’s largest estuary, has suffered water-quality problems, loss of living resources, and habitat degradation. In response, a group of concerned Government agencies formed the Chesapeake Bay Program (CBP) to establish goals for restoring the Bay and its watershed. The USGS, one of the original CBP partners, has the important role of providing scientific information used to design, carry out, and assess the effectiveness of restoration. The USGS Chesapeake Bay Science Program is meeting these needs through environmental research, monitoring, computer modeling, and information transfer with our partners in the CBP. For more information, visit the web at: http://chesapeake.usgs.gov/chesbay/.
USGS regional programs consist of land-use mapping, investigations of urban development and sprawl, and use of satellite imagery to evaluate methods for controlling invasive plant species. A pilot program between the USGS and several State and local agencies was recently completed in Delaware on a new digital map product, produced using electronic data instead of paper. It will be used by the USGS as a template for a new National map. It is available on the web at: http://www.datamil.udel.edu/. Geology
Coastal areas are a vital resource for transportation, commerce, and recreation. Changes in the marine environment can endanger the quality of life, threaten property, pose a risk to fragile shorelines, and affect livelihoods. Parts of Maryland, Delaware, and Washington, D.C. are experiencing the effects of coastal erosion and sea-level rise. The USGS Coastal and Marine Geology Program provides scientific data to ensure careful use and protection of coastal and offshore resources. USGS investigations of coastal sediment transport and studies of the interaction of freshwater and saltwater in Maryland and Delaware coastal regions are contributing to this knowledge. For more information on the USGS Coastal and Marine Geology program, visit http://marine.usgs.gov/.
The USGS Biological Resources Discipline provides the information needed to help manage the Nation’s plant and animal resources. The USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center in Laurel, MD is a leader in wildlife and applied environmental research to improve the management of biological resources. Patuxent’s scientists are recognized leaders in the fields of migratory bird studies, wildlife population analysis, waterfowl harvest, habitat management, wetlands, coastal zone and flood-plain management, contaminants, endangered species, urban wildlife, ecosystem management, and management of National Parks and National Wildlife Refuges. The Center is responsible for the North American Bird Banding Program, the Breeding Bird Survey, and other national bird monitoring programs. The Center’s scientific and technical assistance publications, wildlife data bases, and electronic media are used nationally and worldwide in managing biological resources. More information about the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center can be found on the web at http://www.pwrc.usgs.gov/. Editor: Valerie M. Gaine Graphics and design: Timothy W. Auer Additional Information
For additional information about these and other USGS activities, please contact:
Also visit the Maryland-Delaware-District of Columbia District
Homepage on the World Wide Web at:
or visit the USGS national Homepage at:
Resources for teachers and students are available at:
For information on natural hazards, volcanoes, earthquakes, floods and droughts, water supply, water quality, invasive species, ecology, natural resource issues, topographic maps, satellite imagery, and anything else related to Earth science, the USGS is YOUR source for science for a changing world.
Download USGS Fact Sheet 2004-3004 pdf 351KB Maintainer: webmaster@md.water.usgs.gov |
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