Welcome to our Watershed Links page.

We hope this newly formatted listing helps you more easily find the weather information you are looking for.

If you would like to recommend a site for inclusion, please let us know and we'll consider it.

If you find that a site doesn't work properly or that a link has become outdated, please let us know that as well. We'll update it promptly.

Until then, happy "surfing"!

Mike & Barbara (How the Weatherworks educators)


Anacostia Watershed Network (Council of Governments site)
http://www.anacostia.net/
This site is sponsored by the Metropolitan Washington (DC) Council of Government's (COG) Anacostia Watershed Restoration Committee (AWRC). The network is designed to provide comprehensive information on resources within the Anacostia Watershed.

Audubon Naturalist Society
http://www.audubonnaturalist.org/
Like its national name-sake, ANS provides lots of solid educational and environmental information, with an emphasis on the local Washington, DC Metro area. Look for information about "Wild Places," "Green Labs" and other innovative programs.

Edward's Aquifer Page
http://www.edwardsaquifer.net/glossary.html
G
lossary of water resource terms. Check out "cubic feet per second" to see just how much water this really is!

Interactive-Environment
http://www.watershed.interactive-environment.com/main/
Want to learn about the many facets of watersheds? If so, this is your one-stop shopping site. Includes easy-to-read material, lots of links for "learning more," and even a place where you can find out about where you are in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed. Currently linked to the NBC4-TV site in Washington, DC.

National Audubon Society
http://www.audubon.org/
Links here to lots of solid educational and environmental information.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Index of Watershed Indicators
http://www.epa.gov/iwi/
How healthy is your watershed? Here an index system helps you find out. There is also a link to the watershed atlas where you can search fro maps by topics and/or key words.

U.S. Geological Survey - Maryland, Delaware and Washington, DC Physiographic Maps
http://md.water.usgs.gov/groundwater/physiomaps/
Learn about the physiographic (geologic) regions that make up the's Watershed landscape in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia. To learn about the blend of geology and topography across the US, go to
http://tapestry.usgs.gov/physiogr/physio.html.

U.S. Geological Survey - Maryland, Delaware and Washington, DC Real-time River Data
http://md.water.usgs.gov/realtime/
Find out the latest groundwater, streamflow and related information for Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia. Links to similar data sets for Pennsylvania, New York, and west Virginia (the other states that comprise the Chesapeake Bay watershed).


This page was updated on April 27, 2002


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