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Low flows and temperatures of streams in the Seattle-Tacoma urban complex and adjacent areas, Washington

January 1, 1972

Data on the minimum flows of streams and water temperature are necessary for the proper planning and development of the water resources of urban Seattle-Tacoma and adjacent areas. The data on low flows are needed for such purposes as (1) designing and operating municipal and industrial water-supply systems; (2) classifying streams as to their potential for waste disposal; (3) defining the amount of water available for irrigation, for maintaining streamflow as required by law or agreement, and for fish propagation; and (4) designing water-storage facilities. Data on stream temperatures are important to many water users because of the many biological, chemical, and physical properties of water that are dependent on temperature. Agricultural and domestic users as well as municipal, industrial and fishery agencies are concerned with water temperatures. In this report, low-flow data are accompanied by information on seasonal variations in water temperatures at sites selected as representing regional stream-temperature patterns. Because low flows and high water temperatures commonly occur together, they may impose constraints on various uses of the region's streams. The following discussion deals first with low-flow trends in the region, then with stream temperatures, and finally with some of the resulting constraints.

Publication Year 1972
Title Low flows and temperatures of streams in the Seattle-Tacoma urban complex and adjacent areas, Washington
DOI 10.3133/ofr72164
Authors F.T. Hidaka
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 72-164
Index ID ofr72164
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse