News Type
Edit block
City of Bloomington Briefing cover image

Bloomington Briefing

Published monthly, the award-winning Bloomington Briefing is mailed to all single-family households and businesses.

You can click on the Bloomington Briefing link to get a list of all items.
Contact Information

Contact Information

Parks and Recreation Department

Title

A closer look at Nine Mile Creek hydrology

Authored on
Bloomington Briefing Published
Changed
Updated on
News Image
Widgets

Streams like Nine Mile Creek are constantly evolving. Bends, pools, riffles, cut banks, snags and the entire creek ecosystem are sculpted by the flow of water.

“The life of every creek is defined by rain,” said Bloomington’s Water Resources Specialist Jack Distel. “During a drought, water might be low. After a big rain, the creek might leave its banks and become a flood. Base full and bank full are terms for two important creek flows.”

Base full refers to normal water level, which is important to aquatic life. Bank full refers to the creek at its fullest without flowing over its banks. Bank full conditions are powerful enough to cause significant erosion and occur often enough to give them more overall influence on the creek than even the big floods, which are rare.

“Bank full is key in creek restoration and management and one major consideration in the Nine Mile Creek corridor and Moir/Central Park restoration project,” said Distel. “Our aim is to make Nine Mile Creek healthier, so it remains part of our community for many years to come.”

For more information about Nine Mile Creek corridor and the Moir/Central Park restoration project, visit bloomingtonforward.org.