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Map of Watershed Sample Sites [Popup PDF]
List of Watershed Sample Sites [Popup]
Named
Streams
McMichael Creek
- Appenzell Creek
- Kettle Creek
- Sand Spring Run
- Lake Creek
- Fall Creek
- Hypsy Creek
- Bowers Creek
- Pocono Creek
 Municipalities
in Watershed
- Jackson Township
- Hamilton Township
- Chestnuthill Township
- Stroud Township
- Stroudsburg Borough
- Ross Township
- Tunkhannock Township
Named
Lakes, Ponds, and Impoundments
- Lake Akiba (on Sand Spring Creek)
- Mountain Springs Lake (on Appenzell Creek)
- Trout Lake (on Appenzell Creek)
- Grubers Lake (on Appenzell Creek)
- Sheridan Dam (on Kettle Creek)
- Saylors Lake, natural (on Lake Creek)
- Lake Watawah (on Lake Creek)
- Lenape Lake (on Spring Run)
- Lake Mineola, natural (on trib to McMichael)
Did
you know?
The McMichael Creek forms at the confluence of three headwater
tributaries: Hypsy, Bowers, and Fall Creeks, which arise from wetlands
and springs on the Pocono Plateau in Tunkhannock and Jackson Townships.
The headwaters area of these creeks is relatively steep terrain forested
primarily with second-growth hardwoods and a streamside canopy of rhododendron.
The McMichael Creek flows in a southerly, then northeasterly direction
before converging with the Brodhead Creek in Stroudsburg. The McMichael
Creek flows approximately 19 miles with a vertical drop of 1700 feet and
drains an area of 69.5 square miles. Headwaters streams begin at elevations
ranging from 2100 feet at the top of Big Pocono Mountain to 1800 feet
at Hypsy gap; the McMichael Creek enters the Brodhead at an elevation
of about 400 feet. The main channel separates at two locations: one mile
below the town of McMichaels and again one mile above Brodheadsville,
forming two distinct "splits" which rejoin downstream.
A significant portion of the McMichael Creek subwatershed is designated
Exceptional Value, including Fall Creek, Bowers Creek, Hypsy Creek, and
the upper part of the McMichael Creek.
The Stroudsburg Borough sewage treatment plant discharges to the McMichael
Creek, near its confluence with the Brodhead. Plants at Snydersville Diner,
King Arthur Restaurant and Monroe County Jail/Pleasant Valley Manor discharge
to the McMichael or tributaries in the Snydersville area.
Lake Creek flows from Saylors Lake, joining the McMichael near Sciota.
Formerly known as Lake Poponoming, Saylors Lake is the most southern moraine
lake in the State. "It lies absolutely on the top of the moraine,
and its surroundings are especially interesting from the fact that large
boulders have been found on its shores which originally came from a point
not nearer than the Adirondack region, 250 miles away, and which must
have been transported by the slow moving ice masses of the ice age."
(Report of the State Commissioner of Fisheries, 1896, p. 234) The lake
is fed by strong bubbling springs in the bottom of the lake.
The Northern Bullrush, a globally rare plant, is found at Lake Mineola
in the McMichael watershed.
The Kettles, located on an unnamed tributary to Kettle Creek, are deep,
circular depressions in bedrock created by the melting of large blocks
of stagnant ice left behind by the glaciers.
Big Pocono Mountain (Camelback) forms the northeastern boundary of the
McMichael watershed.
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