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Kingman Lake is not a true lake, but a 110-acre tidal freshwater impoundment created in the 1920s and 1930s during a massive dredging and channelization project on the Anacostia River to provide a recreational boating area for District of Columbia residents.
Rock Creek flows through Montgomery County, Maryland, and the northwest portion of Washington, DC, to join with the Potomac River.
The Washington Ship Channel and the Tidal Basin are man-made water bodies located in the southwest section of the District along the Potomac River.
This (non-required) TMDL is for Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD) in Fort Davis. Fort Davis is not directly classified as a separate waterbody in the DC Water Quality Standards. It is classified on the basis of current use and designated beneficial uses as a tributary of the Anacostia River
The highly urbanized Anacostia River watershed covers 176 square miles in the District of Columbia and Maryland. Only 17 percent of the watershed lies within the District; much of this drainage is controlled by storm sewers or combined (storm and sanitary) sewers.
Kingman Lake is not a true lake, but a 110-acre tidal freshwater impoundment created in the 1920s and 1930s during a massive dredging and channelization project on the Anacostia River to provide a recreational boating area for District of Columbia residents.
Final documents regarding the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) of fecal coliform bacteria in UPPER POTOMAC RIVER, MIDDLE POTOMAC RIVER, LOWER POTOMAC RIVER, Battery Kemble Creek, Foundry Branch, and Dalecarlia Tributary
The Washington Ship Channel is a man-made waterbody located east of the Potomac River and was built in the late 19th century by the Army Corps of Engineers. The Washington Ship Channel runs from Hains Point at the confluence of the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers to the Tidal Basin.
Rock Creek flows through Montgomery County, Maryland, and the northwest portion of Washington, DC, to join with the Potomac River.