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<br />standards for the stream, Concentrations of dissolved manganese and total- <br />recoverable nickel and silver increased just downstream from the Colorado <br />Springs Wastewater Treatment Plant effluent, Of these trace elements, only <br />dissolved-manganese concentrations exceeded the water-quality standard for <br />Lower Fountain Creek, Concentrations of dissolved iron, total selenium, and <br />total-recoverable copper and lead exceeded the water-quality standards for <br />Lower Fountain Creek at the downstream sites, <br /> <br />Water-quality data collected on Upper Monument Creek from 1977 through <br />1980 indicate that Upper Monument Creek is a well-oxygenated stream and has <br />a small 5-day biochemical oxygen demand, small concentrations of dissolved <br />and suspended solids, total ammonia, total nitrite plus nitrate, and trace <br />elements. <br /> <br />I Five-day biochemical oxygen demand and concentrations of fecal coliform <br />badteria, dissolved chloride, dissolved sulfate, and total nitrite plus nitrate <br />as nitrogen frequently increased downstream but generally remained less than <br />the water-quality standards. Concentrations of total-recoverable copper, <br />iron, lead, manganese, and zinc frequently increased downstream and, with the <br />exception of manganese, frequently exceeded the water-quality standards, <br /> <br />INTRODUCTION <br /> <br />Fountain and Monument Creeks originate in the Rampart Range northwest of <br />CoLorado Springs (fig. 1), As the streams flow from the mountains, the flows <br />are affected by storage reservoirs, power developments, diversions for irri- <br />gation, municipal use, irrigation-return flows, discharge from wastewater- <br />treatment plants, and ground-water discharge. These activities also may <br />affect water quality, The water quality of Fountain and Monument Creeks has <br />been monitored since 1975 by the U,S. Geological Survey in cooperation with <br />the Colorado Springs Department of Utilities and the Lower Fountain Water- <br />Quality Management Association, This monitoring was part of a study to <br />develop a water-quality data base for use by local agencies in the develop- <br />ment of an areawide water-quality management plan, <br /> <br />During 1982, the State of Colorado adopted regulations that established <br />basic standards, an antidegradation standard, and a system for classifying and <br />assigning numeric water-quality standards to State waters, including Fountain <br />and Monument Creeks (Colorado Department of Health, 1982). As a result of the <br />stream-classification process, Fountain and Monument Creeks were divided into <br />stream segments based on beneficial-use categories, Most of the water-quality <br />constituents monitored during the study have numeric water-quality standards <br />and were evaluated according to those standards. <br /> <br />Purpose and Scope <br /> <br />The purpose of this report is to describe the general water-quality <br />characteristics of Fountain and Monument Creeks (fig, 1) and to evaluate the <br />water quality of each stream segment, with emphasis on evaluating the quality <br />of water as it pertains to the numeric water-quality standards established by <br />the Colorado Department of Health (1982) for the stream segments. Selected <br /> <br />2 <br />