Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
Flir to Reveal Advanced Decarbonization and Asset Protection Solutions at Energy Exchange Australia 2026
Rating12345As Australia’s energy sector faces intensifying pressure to slash...
Terran Orbital Subsidiary Selected for ESA Planetary Defense Mission to Asteroid Apophis
Rating12345IRVINE, Calif., March 13, 2026 — Terran Orbital, a global...
Securing the Future with Geospatial: SLU, NGA Host Geo-Resolution Conference on September 10
Rating12345ST. LOUIS – The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and Saint Louis...

February 22nd, 2013
Tool Estimates Streamflow for Pennsylvania Waterways

  • Rating12345

Water resource managers can now estimate daily baseline streamflows in a matter of minutes for any location along Pennsylvania’s waterways. The Baseline Streamflow Estimator, called “BaSE,” provides users with estimated daily mean streamflow, minimally altered by human activities, for locations on Pennsylvania streams that don’t have streamgages. Pennsylvania is one of the first states in the nation to have such a tool.

“BaSE provides water-resource managers with nearly 50 years of daily mean streamflow for ungaged sites in a matter of minutes that they can use for their projects. These daily values can then be used to generate a number of streamflow statistics that may be needed for decision making,” said Marla Stuckey, USGS hydrologist and project lead in Pennsylvania.

Water-resource managers use daily mean streamflow to evaluate withdrawal, allocation, and wastewater permit applications and to assess the health of the Commonwealth’s streams.  Historically, it has been difficult, costly, and time intensive to estimate daily mean streamflow for stream locations that were not gaged, or monitored. Now, BaSE allows users to estimate daily mean streamflow values and daily hydrographs by entering a few basic basin characteristics in an easy-to-use tool.  The output is a summary spreadsheet, containing information about the location of interest, including daily mean streamflow for every day from 1960 to 2008. 

BaSE relies on a methodology that uses flow-duration curves, which illustrate the percentage of time, or probability, that a flow value in a stream will equal or exceed a particular value. Flow-duration curves are generated for reference streamgage locations with monitored streamflow and the curves are transferred to ungaged locations to estimate daily mean streamflow.

BaSE chooses the most appropriate reference streamgage for the ungaged location and applies newly developed regression equations to convert the transferred flow duration curve to streamflow at the ungaged location.

A USGS Scientific Investigations Report describing BaSE can be found online.