By Mike Ekberg, manager of water resources monitoring and analysis
Whether you’re just curious and want to know how much rain fell in the Miami Valley region over the past 24 hours. Or you’re an engineer who needs to know the highest river level for infrastructure design. Or you’re a hydrologist needing groundwater levels for a modeling study. MCD’s newwater data portalis your go-to spot.
[caption id="attachment_8447" align="aligncenter" width="400"] With the water data portal, you can check how much rain has fallen at various stations throughout the watershed like this example from March 2020. Choose from 24-hour, seven-day, 30-day totals and more.[/caption]
Powered by Aquatic Informatics
To createan easy-to-access portal to all our water data, MCD contracted withAquatic Informatics, a cloud-based water information management system.MCD staff can now upload water data—measured in the field and throughout the region—directly to the Internet.
MCD staff also performs quality assurance and quality control checks when needed to ensure the data is as accurate as possible. Relevant information can also be extracted and displayed from other agencies, such as the U.S. Geological Survey.
Featuring data dashboards
With the portal, you can view data dashboards like this one for viewing up-to-the-hour information on river conditions.
This particular data dashboard provides current river flow data. When you see these dials, you’ll be viewing the latest stream flow measurement at a particular location (in this case, Troy with a stream flow of 669 cubic feet per second). The dial goes up to 78,000 cubic feet per second which is the capacity of the river channel at Troy.
Who uses water data
The portal can provide data based on a variety of needs. For example: