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Why You Should
The natural landscape
is divided into watersheds (river or lake basins) that cross township,
county, and state political boundaries. Management of natural resources,
such as drinking water, at the watershed level is becoming more common,
requiring cooperation among public and private landowners and local governments.
The following text and maps provide an introduction to the benefits of
watershed protection.
Wherever You Go--You're in a Watershed! Every drop (or flake!) of precipitation that falls to the Earth is on its way somewhere else. Some evaporates or is taken up by plants. Some seeps through the soil to become groundwater that resurfaces some distance away through springs, seeps, or wells. Some runs off the land surface to lakes or rivers. A watershed includes all the land area that drains to a particular lake or river. Map
1 Watersheds of Michigan's
Upper Peninsula (189 K)
Scratching the Surface of Drinking Water Quality The Baraga-Houghton-Keweenaw County area is part of seven watersheds, all of which drain to the larger Lake Superior or Lake Michigan watersheds. Even through most of us drink groundwater from private or community wells (except Baraga, L'Anse, and Gay residents, whose drinking water comes from Keweenaw Bay), the quality of our drinking water depends on how well we take care of our watersheds. How we use the land is important. Map
2 Baraga-Houghton-Keweenaw County
Watersheds (289 K)
Piecing Together the Watershed Protection Puzzle What you do, or don't do, on your land has long-term consequences. Your private property rights are balanced by responsibilities. Learn to be a good steward of your land. You will benefit, and so will current and future generations of residents that share your watershed. Like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, individual parcels of land--properly managed--join together to keep our watersheds healthy. Map
3 Otter/Sturgeon River Watershed (415 K)
Benefits of Watershed Protection
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