Your Watershed Address (Great Lakes)
Watersheds are areas of land in which all water drains into a common body of water. Because water does not obey political boundaries, watershed maps can cross county, state and even national lines. The size of a watershed can vary, but all bodies of water have one. You can think of watersheds like pieces of a puzzle; each one is part of a larger watershed “picture.” The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Watershed covers all or part of seven states and extends into Canada. Anytime a raindrop falls in one of these areas, that raindrop could eventually make its way to one of the Lakes.
Viewer Tip: Do you know your watershed address?
- Surf your watershed: Enter your zip code to find out which watershed you live in. http://cfpub.epa.gov/surf/locate/index.cfm.
- Explore your watershed: Take a walk or hike in your community and observe which way water travels. Watershed boundaries are usually the highest points of land from which water flows downhill. Where does rain water end up after it hits the ground? Where does your local stream or river lead?
- Adopt your watershed: Become a volunteer water quality monitor or organize a trash cleanup. Learn more: http://www.epa.gov/adopt/.
Seasons: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter
(Sources: USGS. Science in Your Watershed. http://water.usgs.gov/wsc/reg/04.html; US EPA, www.epa.gov/adopt)

