USGS Water Science Centers are located in each state.
Podcasts and Videos
The North Carolina Water Science Center (NC WSC) presents these videos and podcasts to help you understand hydrologic conditions in North Carolina and the role USGS plays in providing water information to you.
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Additional USGS podcasts and multimedia resources are available from:
Urban development is associated with an increase in impervious surfaces, that is, surfaces such as rooftops, sidewalks, and streets that prevent precipitation from infiltrating into the groundwater. Impervious surfaces increase the volume and energy of stormwater that reaches streams and can lead to adverse physical and water quality impacts, including erosions and increased nutrient runoff. In this video USGS scientist Tom Cuffney and Tom Schueler, director of the Chesapeake Stormwater Network, discuss the effects of impervious surfaces on stream health.
USGS CoreCast: Groundwater Awareness Week is March 6-12 From large drawdowns in the Great Plains aquifer to arsenic in some wells in New England, this episode of CoreCast highlights six different USGS groundwater studies all across the United States, including Wake County in North Carolina. (7.68 Mb)
USGS Hydrologic Data Collection Program in North Carolina USGS North Carolina Data Chief, Jeanne Robbins, provides an overview on hydrologic data collection techniques for North Carolina.(13.39 Mb)
Marking the Milestone, The Triangle Area Water Supply Monitoring Project, Twenty years and counting... USGS North Carolina Water Quality Specialist Mary Georgino discusses The Triangle Area Water Supply Monitoring Project.(5.66 Mb)
Hurricane Floyd, and the Floods of 1999 USGS North Carolina Water Science Center Director Jerad Bales discusses Hurricane Floyd and flood impacts on North Carolina in 1999. (10.24 Mb)