Tables Related to Indiana's 2020 303(D) List Review
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E.3-IDNR Roster of Navigable Waterways in Indiana
APPENDIX E.3 IDNR Roster of Navigable Waterways in Indiana Nonrule Policy Documents NATURAL RESOURCES COMMISSION Information Bulletin #3 July 1, 1992 SUBJECT: Roster of Indiana Waterways Declared Navigable I. NAVIGABILITY Property rights relative to Indiana waterways often are determined by whether the waterway is "navigable". Both common law and statutory law make distinctions founded upon whether a river, stream, embayment, or lake is navigable. A landmark decision in Indiana with respect to determining and applying navigability is State v. Kivett, 228 Ind. 629, 95 N.E.2d 148 (1950). The Indiana Supreme Court stated that the test for determining navigability is whether a waterway: was available and susceptible for navigation according to the general rules of river transportation at the time [1816] Indiana was admitted to the Union. It does not depend on whether it is now navigable. .The true test seems to be the capacity of the stream, rather than the manner or extent of use. And the mere fact that the presence of sandbars or driftwood or stone, or other objects, which at times render the stream unfit for transportation, does not destroy its actual capacity and susceptibility for that use. A modified standard for determining navigability applies to a body of water which is artificial. The test for a man-made reservoir, or a similar waterway which did not exist in 1816, is whether it is navigable in fact. Reed v. United States, 604 F. Supp. 1253 (1984). The court observed in Kivett that "whether the waters within the State under which the lands lie are navigable or non-navigable, is a federal" question and is "determined according to the law and usage recognized and applied in the federal courts, even though" the waterway may not be "capable of use for navigation in interstate or foreign commerce." Federal decisions applied to particular issues of navigability are useful precedents, regardless of whether the decisions originated in Indiana or another state. -
Multi-Hazard Mitigation Plan Update
MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE Grant County, Indiana Prepared for: Grant County, Indiana Town of Converse, Indiana Town of Fairmount, Indiana Town of Fowlerton, Indiana City of Gas City, Indiana City of Jonesboro, Indiana City of Marion, Indiana Town of Matthews, Indiana Town of Swayzee, Indiana Town of Sweetser, Indiana Town of Upland, Indiana Town of Van Buren, Indiana January 2017 Prepared by Christopher B. Burke Engineering, LLC 115 West Washington Street, Suite 1368 South Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 CBBEL Project No. 16-194 DISCLAIMER Exhibits and any GIS data used within this report are not intended to be used as legal documents or references. They are intended to serve as an aid in graphic representation only. Information shown on exhibits is not warranted for accuracy or merchantability. LOCAL PROJECT CONTACTS: Bruce Bender, Director 401 South Adams Street Marion IN 46953 765.651.2410 [email protected] Tom Culley, Deputy Director 401 South Adams Street Marion IN 46953 765.651.2410 [email protected] Grant County MHMP Update January 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Disaster Life Cycle ............................................................................................................................................ 1 1.2 Project Scope and Purpose ............................................................................................................................. -
Indiana Glaciers.PM6
How the Ice Age Shaped Indiana Jerry Wilson Published by Wilstar Media, www.wilstar.com Indianapolis, Indiana 1 Previiously published as The Topography of Indiana: Ice Age Legacy, © 1988 by Jerry Wilson. Second Edition Copyright © 2008 by Jerry Wilson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 2 For Aaron and Shana and In Memory of Donna 3 Introduction During the time that I have been a science teacher I have tried to enlist in my students the desire to understand and the ability to reason. Logical reasoning is the surest way to overcome the unknown. The best aid to reasoning effectively is having the knowledge and an understanding of the things that have previ- ously been determined or discovered by others. Having an understanding of the reasons things are the way they are and how they got that way can help an individual to utilize his or her resources more effectively. I want my students to realize that changes that have taken place on the earth in the past have had an effect on them. Why are some towns in Indiana subject to flooding, whereas others are not? Why are cemeteries built on old beach fronts in Northwest Indiana? Why would it be easier to dig a basement in Valparaiso than in Bloomington? These things are a direct result of the glaciers that advanced southward over Indiana during the last Ice Age. The history of the land upon which we live is fascinating. Why are there large granite boulders nested in some of the fields of northern Indiana since Indiana has no granite bedrock? They are known as glacial erratics, or dropstones, and were formed in Canada or the upper Midwest hundreds of millions of years ago. -
Indiana – Land of the Indians
Indiana – Land of the Indians Key Objectives State Parks and Reservoirs Featured In this unit students will learn about American Indian tribes ■ Pokagon State Park stateparks.IN.gov/2973.htm in early Indiana and explore the causes of removal of three ■ Tippecanoe River State Park stateparks.IN.gov/2965.htm American Indian groups from Indiana, their resettlement ■ Prophetstown State Park stateparks.IN.gov/2971.htm during the 1830s, and what life is like today for these tribes. ■ Mississinewa Lake stateparks.IN.gov/2955.htm Activity: Standards: Benchmarks: Assessment Tasks: Key Concepts: Indiana Indian tribes Identify and describe historic Native American Indian removal groups who lived in Indiana before the time Be able to name the various American Home and Indiana rivers SS.4.1.2 of early European exploration, including ways Indian tribes who called Indiana home Language “Home” and what that the groups adapted to and interacted with and where in the state they lived. it means the physical environment. Indiana Indians today Explain the importance of major transporta- Identify important rivers in Indiana tion routes, including rivers, in the exploration, SS.4.3.9 and explain their value to people and settlement and growth of Indiana, and in the parks across time. state’s location as a crossroad of America. Understand that the way we write and Consult reference materials, both print and pronounce Indian words is different ELA.4.RV.2.5 digital, to find the pronunciation and clarify than how they may have originally been the precise meanings of words and phrases. spoken. Be able to describe the reasons why the American Indians were removed Identify and explain the causes of the removal and where they ended up settling, and Disruption SS.4.1.5 of Native American Indian groups in the state understand the lifeways and landscape of Tribal Life and their resettlement during the 1830s. -
Survey of the Freshwater Mussels
ILLINO S UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Large-scale Digitization Project, 2007. bO&C Natural History Survey TLf94S Library I l' 13) SURVEY OF THE FRESHWATER MUSSELS (MOLLUSCA: UNIONIDAE) OF THE WABASH RIVER DRAINAGE PHASE III: WHITE RIVER AND SELECTED TRIBUTARIES Kevin S. Cummings, Christine A. Mayer, and Lawrence M. Page Center for Biodiversity Technical Report 1991 (3) Illinois Natural History Survey 607 E. Peabody Drive Champaign, Illinois 61820 Prepared for Indiana Department of Natural Resources Division of Fish and Wildlife 607 State Office Building Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 Study Funded by a Grant from the Indiana Department of Natural Resources Nongame & Endangered Wildlife Program Endangered Species Act Project E- 1, Study 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE LIST OF FIGURES..................................................................................................... i LIST OF TABLES ..................................................................................................... iii INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................2 STUDY AREA AND METHODS.............................................................................. 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION.............................................. .................................. 9 SPECIES ACCOUNTS............................... ...............................................................21 RECOMMENDATIONS.......................... -
Exhibit 9-4H for the IDNR Navigable Waterways Roster
IDNR Navigable Waterways Roster: Name of Waterway Portion Considered Navigable Anderson River Navigable in Spencer County from its junction with the Ohio (including Middle River for 28.4 river miles to the Perry-Spencer County Line. Fork) The Middle Fork is navigable from its junction with the Anderson River for 3.3 river miles. Armuth Ditch See Black Creek Arnold Creek Navigable in Ohio County from its junction with the Ohio River for 4.4 river miles. Baker Creek Navigable in Spencer County from its junction with Little Pigeon Creek 1.8 river miles. Bald Knob Creek Navigable in Perry County from its junction with Oil Creek for 0.5 river miles. Banbango Creek See Baugo Creek. Baugo Creek Navigable from its junction with the St. Joseph River in South Bend for 15.2 river miles to the main forks (near Wakarusa). Bayou Creek Navigable in Vanderburgh County from its junction with the Ohio River for 1.5 river miles. Beanblossom Creek Navigable in Monroe County from its junction with the West Fork of the White River for 17.7 river miles to Griffy Creek. Bear Creek Navigable in Perry County from its junction with the Ohio River for 1.6 river miles. Big Blue River Navigable from its junction with Sugar Creek (to form the Driftwood River) for 55.46 river miles to the Henry-Rush County Line. Big Blue River See, also, Blue River. Big Creek Navigable in Posey County from its junction with the Wabash River for 25.4 river miles (near Cynthiana). See, also, Little Fork of Big Creek. -
Destruction of Delaware and Miami Towns in the Aftermath of the Battle of Tippecanoe: the Impact of Perspective on History
Destruction of Delaware and Miami Towns in the Aftermath of the Battle of Tippecanoe: The Impact of Perspective on History WILLIAM W. GIFFIN Indiana State University Smoke rose from burning Delaware and Miami towns along the Mississinewa River of northeastern Indiana in mid-December 1812. The time was about a year after the Battle of Tippecanoe near Prophetstown on the upper Wabash River in the Indiana Territory. A military force repre senting the United States government was executing a de facto policy of burning dwellings, destroying stored grain, killing cattle, and confiscating horses of the Native American people in the Mississinewa valley. Mean while, some men of the towns, largely Miamis, gathered to confront the government's troops. There was a brief conflict resulting in casualties on both sides. Shortly afterwards, the government force's commander decided to order his men to return to their home base in Ohio instead of continuing their campaign of destruction in the Mississinewa valley. These events can be seen as part of the aftermath of the Battle of Tippecanoe in November 1811. William Henry Harrison, Governor of the Indiana Territory, led an army of about a thousand men on a long march up the Wabash River into the northern third of present Indiana. Harrison departed Vincennes, the territorial capital, on 26th September and arrived at Prophetstown on 6th November. Undoubtedly, the residents of Prophets- town saw the arrival of Harrison's army at Prophetstown as the culmination of an invasion of lands occupied by Native Americans. All Anglo- American settlements in the Indiana Territory were located in the southern third of present Indiana far from Prophetstown. -
Flood-Inundation Maps for the Mississinewa River at Marion, Indiana, 2013
Prepared in cooperation with the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs Flood-Inundation Maps for the Mississinewa River at Marion, Indiana, 2013 Miss iss i newa Riv er 15 NORTH HUNTINGTON ROAD 9 NORTH WABASH ROAD Hummel Creek 37 03326500 BALDWIN AVENUE HIGHLAND AVENUE Marion Dam Massey Creek 15 37 CONRAIL Railroad Bridge WASHINGTON STREET WASHINGTON 9 18 Marion 3RD STREET 4TH STREET BRANSON STREET BRANSON 18 Boots Creek M i s si ss in e w a STREET PENNSYLVANIA R i v er Lugar Creek Scientific Investigations Report 2014–5060 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover: Illustration showing the simulated flood-inundation map corresponding to a streamgage stage of 16 feet for Mississinewa River at Marion, Indiana. Flood-Inundation Maps for the Mississinewa River at Marion, Indiana, 2013 By William F. Coon Prepared in cooperation with the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs Scientific Investigations Report 2014–5060 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior SALLY JEWELL, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Suzette M. Kimball, Acting Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2014 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment, visit http://www.usgs.gov or call 1–888–ASK–USGS. For an overview of USGS information products, including maps, imagery, and publications, visit http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod To order this and other USGS information products, visit http://store.usgs.gov Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. -
KIDNER BRIDGE (Grant County Bridge 160) Spanning The
KIDNER BRIDGE HAER No. IN-78 (Grant County Bridge 160) Spanning the Mississinewa River on County Road 700 South Upland Vicinity Grant County Indiana J PHOTOGRAPHS WRITTEN HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE DATA HISTORIC. AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD National Park Service Northeast Region U.S. Custom House 200 Chestnut Street r Philadelphia, PA 19106 \ HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD i- J KIDNER BRIDGE (GRANT COUNTY BRIDGE 160) HAER NO. IN-78 Location: Spanning the Mississinewa River on County Road 700 South, 10 miles southeast of Marion, Indiana and 1.14 miles east of 1-69. Upland vicinity Grant County Indiana. UTM: 16.624950.4478750 Quad: Gas City, Indiana Construction Company: Indiana Bridge Company of Muncie Date of Construction: 1899 Present Owner Grant County Grant County Commissioners 401 S. Adams Street Marion, Indiana 46953 Present Use: Vehicular and pedestrian bridge Significance: Kidner Bridge is the oldest of the two pinned polygonal Warren through trusses in Indiana. It was built by the Indiana Bridge Company of Muncie, Indiana, a prolific Indiana firm of that time. Project Information: This documentation was undertaken in December, 1992, in accordance with the Memorandum of Agreement by the Grant County Board of Commissioners, the Indiana Department of Transportation, the Federal Highway Administration and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation as a mitigative measure prior to the demolition and replacement of the bridge. Aaron Davenport BUTLER, FAIRMAN and SEUFERT, INC. 9405 Delegates Row Indianapolis, IN 46240 KIDNER BRIDGE (Grant County Bridge 160) HAER NO. IN-78 (Page 2) Kidner Bridge (Grant County Bridge 160) spans the Mississinewa River which flows through Grant County in a southeast to northwest direction. -
INRC 1997 Outstanding Rivers List for Indiana
Indiana Register NATURAL RESOURCES COMMISSION Information Bulletin #4 (Second Amendment) SUBJECT: Outstanding Rivers List for Indiana I. INTRODUCTION To help identify the rivers and streams that have particular environmental or aesthetic interest, a special listing has been prepared by the Division of Outdoor Recreation of the Department of Natural Resources. The listing is a corrected and condensed version of a listing compiled by American Rivers and dated October 1990. There are about 2,000 river miles included on the listing, a figure that represents less than 9% of the estimated 24,000 total river miles in Indiana. The Natural Resources Commission has adopted the listing as an official recognition of the resource values of these waters. A river included in the listing qualifies under one or more of the following 22 categories. An asterisk indicates that all or part of the river segment was also included in the "Roster of Indiana Waterways Declared Navigable", 15 IR 2385 (July 1992). In 2006, the commission updated this citation, and Information Bulletin #3 (Second Amendment) was posted in the Indiana Register at 20061011-IR-312060440NRA. A river designated "EUW" is an exceptional use water. A river designated "HQW" is a high quality water, and a river designated "SS" is a salmonoid stream. 1. Designated national Wild and Scenic Rivers. Rivers that Congress has included in the National Wild and Scenic System pursuant to the National Wild and Scenic River Act, Public Law 90-452. 2. National Wild and Scenic Study Rivers. Rivers that Congress has determined should be studied for possible inclusion in the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System. -
Grant County, Indiana
¸ # n o h t " s S g Warren a n i b t a La Fontaine n u W S" H Huntington Mississinewa Huntington Wabash Wells Wabash Grant Lake Grant Miami ¸ # Van Buren t S" s l n l a e r W i G t n m a a r i G M ¸ # ¸ # Converse S" Sweetser Wells S" Blackford Miami ¸ d # Howar Marion S" 9 6 - I § ¨ ¦ ¸ # ¸ Swayzee # S" ¸ # ¸ ¸ # # Gas City d t r n a a S" w r o G M Upland d H r Jonesboro t o f S" i n k s a r S" c a G sis l sin B e w ¸ # a ¸ # Rive r S" ¸ # Fairmount S" Howard Tipton t n n o t a r p Matthews i G T S" W k ree Grant il Grant dcat C Delaware Madison D M e a l a n d w ¸ n o i # s s o a i o t r d n p e i a T M Summitville ¨¦§ S" I - 6 9 Source: Esri, DigitalGlobe, GeoEye, i-cubed, USDA, USGS, AEX, Getmapping, Aerogrid, IGN, IGP, swisstopo, and the GIS User Community Withdrawal Location River Major Lakes ¸ WELL INTAK# E 7Q2 Flow (MGD) Interstate S" ¸ Water Resources # Energy/Mining <10 MGD County ¸ # Industry Irrigation 10 - 50 MGD S" City ¸ and Use in # 50 - 100 MGD ¸ # Misc. Miles 100 - 500 MGD ¸ Grant County # Public Supply N 0 1 2 4 Data Sources: U.S. Geological Survey and Indiana Department of Natural Resources Rural Use > 500 MGD Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr., Governor Department of Natural Resources Division of Water Robert E. -
Columbus, Indiana City Map Of
I E F G H A B C D CITY MAP OF COLUMBUS, INDIANA Highfield West Spring Hill 11 11 Westgate Northgate Woodland Parks Flatrock River Flatrock Park North Columbus Municipal Airport Haw Creek N Flatrock Park Lowell 0 2000 4000 I.U.P.U.C. 10 IUPUC 3000 5000 Info-Tech 1000 Park Northbrook 10 Corn Brook Park Forest Estates North Ivy Tech Progress Park Autumnwood Sims Homestead Northbrook Addn. Park Carter Crossing Riverview Acres Taylor Sycamore Homestead Bend Mobile Home The Villas Carter of Stonecrest Cemetery Westenedge Park Pinebrooke Adams Park Pepper Tree Breakaway Trails Rocky Ford Village Princeton Parkside Crossing Park School Candlelight Jackson Park Park Forest Arrowood Indian Hills Woodfield Estates Village Chapel Place Pinebrooke Bluff South Canterbury Arbors At Apartments Rosevelt Park Waters Edge Deer- High Vista Washington field Place Parkside The Woods Willowwood 9 Apts. Tudor Rocky Ford Green View Park Forest Park North Par 3 Rost's 2nd Cedar Windsor Place Golf Course 9 Addition Heathfield Ridge Broadmoor North Eastridge Manor Greenbriar Commerce Park Broadmoor Richards Richards Rost's 3rd Addition 3rd Rost's North Meadow School Mead Village Questover Skyview Estates Washington Heather Heights Park Prairie Stream Estates Forest Park Sims West Mead Village Park Cornerstone's Northpark Hillcrest Jefferson Park Forest Park Rost's 3rd Addition 3rd Rost's Madison Park Northern Village Everroad Chapel Square Tipton Park North Shopping Center Park Columbus Village Apts. Grant Park Northside Carriage Middle Everroad Park West Estates B&K School Industrial Foxpointe Park Fairlawn Williamsburg Flintwood Everroad Apartments Schmidt Park Tipton Park School Foxpointe Apts.