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Tracking Oregon’s Water Resources: An Overview of Data Resources and a Pitch for a United Network Rich Marvin, R.G., P.H. Kara Morris Sr. Hydrologist Hydrographer Lloyd VanGordon Hydrographics Section Manager
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Focus: Physical Hydrology Time Series Data for: SW GW Climate
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Surface Water U.S. Geological Survey: 215 NRT Gaging Stations 12 Lakes and Reservoirs Wealth of historical data http://or.water.usgs.gov/
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Surface Water OR Water Resources Dept: 207 Gaging stations (160 near real-time) 40,000 Misc. mmts Links to USGS gages http://apps.wrd.state.or.us/apps/sw/hydro_near_real_time/default.aspx
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Surface Water U.S. Bureau of Reclamation: HydroMet 50 NRT Gages Teacup diagrams for reservoirs http://www.usbr.gov/pn/hydromet/
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Surface Water U.S. Corps of Engineers: DataQuery -Reservoirs -Streams -Weather -Fish Counts -Water Quality http://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/perl/dataquery.pl
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SW: Other Sources Idaho Power: 100 gages (16 in Oregon) Snake R and tribs http://www.idahopower.com/OurEnvironment/WaterInformation/StreamFlow/default.cfm
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SW: Other Sources Douglas County: -About 20 gages -Q and/or WQ -USGS or BLM coop on many http://www.co.douglas.or.us/streamreadings/streamsnws.asp
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SW: Other Sources H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest - 8 gages plus a network of met stations http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/
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SW: Other Sources US Fish & Wildlife Service: 76 Ponds and lakes 26 Streams and canals Contact: Shelley Fluter Shelley_fluter@fws.gov
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SW: Other Sources The Fresh Water Trust 29 gages, for stream restoration and instream water rights http://www.thefreshwatertrust.org/
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GW Levels USGS: 4 NRT stations Daily data for 91 sites 8,600 field observations http://waterdata.usgs.gov/or/nwis/gw
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GW Levels OWRD: State Obs Well Network - 349 Current - 366 Discontinued http://www.wrd.state.or.us/OWRD/GW/well_data.shtml#View_Water_Level_Data
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GW Levels OR Dept of Environmental Quality: LASAR WL data for 500+ monitoring wells http://deq12.deq.state.or.us/lasar2/default.aspx
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Climate Data National Climate Data Center: Network of NRT climate stations $$ for data http://gis.ncdc.noaa.gov/map/lcd/
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Climate Data NRCS SNOTEL: 81 active sites http://www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/snotel/Oregon/oregon.html
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Climate Data USBR AgriMet 31 NRT sites ET estimates Temp, Precip, Wind, Radiation http://www.usbr.gov/pn/agrimet/index.ht ml
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So Many Data Points, So Many Time Series… What if these resources could be tied together by a single website? - Less overlap of efforts - Better cooperation - Easier access to data
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Challenges Who would host? How to serve up diverse data sets and keep current? How to evaluate data quality? How to maintain speed with so much data?
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Northwest Alliance of Computational Science and Engineering NACSE, based at OSU Data systems to help merge and present information from many groups http://www.nacse.org/
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Possible Model/Host? Oregon Explorer Collaborative effort: OSU Libraries Institute for Natural Resources NACSE http://oregonexplorer.info/
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Possible Host? (cont.) http://oregonexplorer.info/ Oregon Explorer Location Portals 5 example basins: Deschutes, Lakes, North Coast, Umpqua, Willamette Topic Portals Hazards, Land Use, Rural Communities, Wetlands, Wildfire Risk, Wildlife Data Portals Imagery, Spatial Data Library
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Oregon Explorer (cont.) Watershed Restoration Tool: Example: Fish Passage Inventory http://oregonexplorer.info/umpqua/WatershedRestorationTool
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Oregon Explorer (cont.) http://oregonexplorer.info/umpqua/WatershedRestorationTool Watershed Restoration Tool
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Conclusions Numerous agencies and organizations collect hydrologic data in Oregon Working with a common provider like OR Explorer benefits all of us by making our data more visible and accessible
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