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To address water-resource management objectives of the National
Park Service in Grand Teton National Park, the U.S. Geological
Survey in cooperation with the National Park Service has conducted
water-quality sampling in the upper Snake River Basin. Routine
sampling of the Snake River was conducted during water years
1998-2002 to monitor the water quality of the Snake River through
time. A synoptic study during 2002 was conducted to supplement the
routine Snake River sampling and establish baseline water-quality
conditions of five of its eastern tributaries?Pilgrim Creek,
Pacific Creek, Buffalo Fork, Spread Creek, and Ditch Creek. Samples
from the Snake River and the five tributaries were collected at 12
sites and analyzed for field measurements, major ions and dissolved
solids, nutrients, selected trace metals, pesticides, and suspended
sediment. In addition, the eastern tributaries were sampled for
fecal-indicator bacteria by the National Park Service during the
synoptic study. Major-ion chemistry of the Snake River varies
between an upstream site above Jackson Lake near the northern
boundary of Grand Teton National Park and a downstream site near
the southern boundary of the Park, in part owing to the inputs from
the eastern tributaries. Water type of the Snake River changes from
sodium bicarbonate at the upstream site to calcium bicarbonate at
the downstream site. The water type of the five eastern tributaries
is calcium bicarbonate. Dissolved solids in samples collected from
the Snake River were significantly higher at the upstream site
(p-value
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