Devastation from the 1913 flood is shown primarily through photographs taken during the March 1913 flood. In the aftermath of the 1913 flood, State and Federal funds were allocated for the installation of a streamgage network to monitor the water level and flow of Ohio's rivers and streams.
Kimberly Shaffer
Kim shaffer is a Hydrologist with the USGS Water Resources Mission Area.
Science and Products
A National Tool for Graphing and Synthesizing Continuous and Discrete Water-Quality Data
Water Use - Ohio Kentucky Indiana
Water Quality Monitor Network In Ohio
Stability testing results for stock solutions to standardize calibration of field fluorescence sensors
Devastation from the 1913 flood is shown primarily through photographs taken during the March 1913 flood. In the aftermath of the 1913 flood, State and Federal funds were allocated for the installation of a streamgage network to monitor the water level and flow of Ohio's rivers and streams.
Water-use data in the United States: Challenges and future directions
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Water-Use Data and Research (WUDR) program overview and status as of March 31, 2022
Nutrient and suspended-sediment concentrations in the Maumee River and tributaries during 2019 rain-induced fallow conditions
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Water-Use Data and Research (WUDR) program overview and status as of October 22, 2020
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) water-use websites
Science and Products
A National Tool for Graphing and Synthesizing Continuous and Discrete Water-Quality Data
Water Use - Ohio Kentucky Indiana
Water Quality Monitor Network In Ohio
Stability testing results for stock solutions to standardize calibration of field fluorescence sensors
Devastation from the 1913 flood is shown primarily through photographs taken during the March 1913 flood. In the aftermath of the 1913 flood, State and Federal funds were allocated for the installation of a streamgage network to monitor the water level and flow of Ohio's rivers and streams.
Devastation from the 1913 flood is shown primarily through photographs taken during the March 1913 flood. In the aftermath of the 1913 flood, State and Federal funds were allocated for the installation of a streamgage network to monitor the water level and flow of Ohio's rivers and streams.