Warning: Javascript must be enabled to use all the features on this page!


Page Loading - Please Wait...

Click to hideNews Bulletins
Click to hide state-specific text

[!] Over the next year, the USGS Pennsylvania Water Science Center will be updating the geodetic vertical elevation (gage datum) for many locations. Click HERE for additional information including a current list of streamgages with upcoming datum changes. This update in gage datum does not affect the location of the streamgage, nor the observed local gage height or discharge recorded at the streamgage.




USGS 01573660 Fishing Creek at Goldsboro, PA

PROVISIONAL DATA SUBJECT TO REVISION

Click to hidestation-specific text
Funding for this site is provided by:

 


Station gage imageSTATION.--01573660 FISHING CREEK AT GOLDSBORO, PA
LOCATION.--Lat 40`09'12", long 76`45'20", York County, Hydrologic Unit 02050305, on downstream side of concrete bridge at intersection of PA Rt 262 and Pine Road, 0.75 mi upstream from mouth, and 0.25 mi west of Goldsboro.
DRAINAGE AREA.--17.5 square miles.
PERIOD OF RECORD.--March 2020 to current year.
GAGE.--Water-stage recorder, crest-stage gage, and water-quality monitor. Datum of gage is 300 ft above North American Vertical Datum of 1988, from topographic map. Satellite telemetry at station.
COOPERATION.--Station established and maintained by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the County of York.
REMARKS.--
Supplied by USGS-- Data transmitter operational limit - 12.5 ft.
This station managed by the PAWSC New Cumberland Office.

Available Parameters Period of Record
  
2020-03-04  2024-04-24
2020-03-03  2024-04-23
2020-03-04  2024-04-24
2020-03-04  2024-04-24
2020-03-04  2024-04-24
2020-03-04  2024-04-24
2021-04-25  2024-04-24
2021-04-25  2024-04-23







 (365)
 

  -- or --

 


 

Summary of all available data for this site
Instantaneous-data availability statement


Discharge, cubic feet per second


Graph of DAILY Discharge, cubic feet per second

Add up to 2 more sites and replot for "Discharge, cubic feet per second"

?
 


Create presentation-quality graph.