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SUMMARY ARCHIVES

Summary of August 2002 Monthly Hydrologic Conditions

Compiled in cooperation with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Provisional assessment of hydrologic conditions in New Jersey

The following pages are adapted for online release from a summary of hydrologic condions for the previous month.

August 2002

Cover from printed version of the document showing map along with sites used in this report

Precipitation was slightly above normal at the Newark and Trenton index stations and below at the Atlantic City index station. Newark reported 4.05 inches, which is 101 percent of normal. Atlantic City reported 2.43 inches, which is 56.2 percent of normal. Trenton reported 4.05 inches, which is 106 percent of normal.

Combined storage in the thirteen major water supply reservoirs as of August 31 was 52.1 billion gallons, which is 64.8 percent of capacity. The storage was 9 billion gallons less than one month ago and 6.8 billion gallons less than one year ago. The thirteen major water supply reservoirs are as follows: Lake Tappan, Woodcliff Lake, Oradell Reservoir, DeForest Lake, Splitrock Reservoir, Boonton Reservoir, Canistear Reservoir, Oak Ridge Reservoir, Clinton Reservoir, Charlottesburg Reservoir, Echo Lake, Wanaque Reservoir and Spruce Run Reservoir.

Streamflow was below normal at all three index stations. The monthly-mean discharge at South Branch Raritan River near High Bridge was 23.4 ft3/s, 30.6 percent of normal. The monthly-mean discharge of the Great Egg Harbor River at Folsom was 19.7 ft3/s, 32 percent of normal. The observed monthly mean discharge of the Delaware River at Trenton was 3,260 ft3/s, 58.7 percent of normal. The observed daily mean discharge of the Delaware River at Trenton on August 31 was 3,800 ft3/s.

Groundwater levels, as measured in water-table observation wells, were below normal at all three index wells.


All of the files listed below are in Portable Document Format (PDF) which can be viewed/printed with the Adobe Acrobat® Reader, freely available for most computer platforms.

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