Dell Creek

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dell_Creek an entity of type: Thing

Dell Creek is a warm freshwater stream that lies in northeastern Sauk County and southern Juneau County in central Wisconsin. Dell Creek was named from the dells which occur along its course. Dell Creek is a warm water sport fishery for the lower 1.5 miles and a Class II trout stream forthe upper 10.5 miles of its length. The creek is classified as an exceptional resource water. Much of Dell Creek's length in Sauk County is publicly owned. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dell Creek
xsd:float 43.56055450439453
xsd:float -89.83860778808594
xsd:integer 17879442
xsd:integer 1065432428
rdf:langString Mouth of Dell Creek
xsd:integer 43
xsd:integer 33
xsd:integer 89
xsd:integer 50
rdf:langString N
xsd:integer 38
rdf:langString W
xsd:integer 19
xsd:string 43.56055555555555 -89.8386111111111
rdf:langString Dell Creek is a warm freshwater stream that lies in northeastern Sauk County and southern Juneau County in central Wisconsin. Dell Creek was named from the dells which occur along its course. Dell Creek is a warm water sport fishery for the lower 1.5 miles and a Class II trout stream forthe upper 10.5 miles of its length. The creek is classified as an exceptional resource water. Much of Dell Creek's length in Sauk County is publicly owned. The main problems on the creek are sediment and nutrient loading from agricultural sources and a lack of in-stream habitat. Surveys conducted in 1995 found low numbers of trout anddetermined the water quality to be from fair to poor in some locations. This indicates that thestream has experienced some severe environmental damage. It is thought that the limitedhabitat is one of the limiting factors for aquatic life. There are also two large impoundments on Dell Creek. One creates Lake Delton and the other creates Mirror Lake. Silt and sediment from farm fields are thought to be a problem in thestream and are causing a sediment problem in the upper end of Mirror Lake. Suspected highnutrient inputs to Mirror Lake from Dell Creek are thought to be fueling the excessive aquaticplant and algae growth in the lake.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2516
<Geometry> POINT(-89.838607788086 43.560554504395)

data from the linked data cloud