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USGS Climate-Response Network (CRN) Well WLN01 | |
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County: | Itasca |
Township: | Carpenter (T06N R23W) |
Location: | In forest, 0.05 miles north of MN HWY 1, 4.1 miles west of Togo, MN |
Land-surface elevation: | 1397.15 +/- 0.08 feet, NAVD88 |
Installation: | Aug. 13, 1999, for the U.S. Geological Survey |
Well information | |
Depth: | 31.66 feet |
Open interval: | 26–31 feet |
Original and current use: | Monitoring, for the USGS National Groundwater and Streamflow Information Program |
Aquifer information | |
Type: | Hydrologically unconfined sand and gravel |
Thickness: | 5 feet (26–31 feet, BLS) |
Deposit: | Glacially deposited sand and gravel |
This site replaces USGS ID: 474917093144601 (link), which was discontinued on July 24, 1999.
This site is monitored as part of the
USGS National Groundwater and Streamflow Information Program.
Water levels below land surface are accurate to 0.01 feet. Water levels above North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (sea level) are calculated by subtracting recorded water levels from the land surface elevation, which is accurate to ± 0.08 feet based on a differential GPS Survey. Water-level differences are accurate to within 0.01 feet.
Water temperature during 21 Nov. 2013 at 23:00 CST to 20 Oct. 2016 at 08:00 CDT (measured with KPSI 500 transducer) were accurate to plus-or-minus 0.3°C. Differences in temperature were accurate to 0.3°C. Water temperature during 20 Oct. 2016 at 09:00 CDT to the present (mesaured with WaterLOG H-3123 transducer) is accurate to plus-or-minus 0.1°C. Differences in temperature is accurate to 0.1°C.
Precipitation is accurate to 0.01 inches except during freezing periods (about Dec. through early Apr.). The rain gage is unheated and uncovered. The precipitation data during freezing periods result from melting of snow (accumulated in the rain gage) during warm periods and do NOT represent actual precipitation. Precipitation totals during freezing periods may underestimate actual totals because the rain gage funnel may be full of snow (preventing further accumulation) or because snow in the funnel may sublimate instead of melt.