Knowledge network
In-depth reference for lake levels, datums, reservoir operations, and fisheries context—not a thin dictionary. Each term links to related concepts, real lakes on Lake Insights, and editorial articles where applicable.
NAVD 88 (National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1988) is the orthometric-height system behind much modern US mapping and surveying. Stage reported "feet NAVD 88" is measured relative to that national surface—not to NGVD 29 unless a source converts explicitly.
Reference surfaces, gauges, and how elevation numbers are labeled.
A datum is the agreed reference surface behind elevation numbers—most often a vertical datum for stage and pool heights. Comparing two readings only makes sense when both carry the same datum label, or a documented conversion between them.
NAVD 88 (National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1988) is the orthometric-height system behind much modern US mapping and surveying. Stage reported "feet NAVD 88" is measured relative to that national surface—not to NGVD 29 unless a source converts explicitly.
NGVD 29 (National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929) is the older national vertical datum still printed on many USACE pool schedules, legacy gauge histories, and southeastern reservoir guides. Treat any NGVD-labeled elevation as valid only in that reference frame.
MSL (mean sea level) is a tidal and charting concept: a long-term average sea surface used for nautical charts and coastal datums. Inland pool guides citing NAVD 88 or NGVD 29 are using geodetic vertical datums—not interchangeable "MSL" labels without a published tie.
Elevation reference describes how a published height is expressed—such as MSL phrasing on summaries, or pool-relative wording—alongside the vertical datum. Lake Insights shows it separately from NGVD 29 or NAVD 88 where catalog metadata provides it.
A gauge reports stage—how high water sits at a sensor, in feet relative to a stated datum. Pool-guide elevations describe operating targets; the gauge tells you where the lake is right now relative to those targets.
Stage is the height of the water surface at a point—usually reported as feet above a stated vertical datum. It is the quantity behind “lake level” charts; also called gage height on USGS and USACE documents.
Pool targets, drawdowns, and flood storage on managed lakes.
A reservoir is a water body created or enlarged by a dam to store runoff for flood control, hydropower, water supply, or recreation. On Lake Insights, reservoirs are the managed lakes whose levels follow rule curves—not free-flowing natural lakes.
Full pool is the target operating elevation operators aim for when inflow, flood risk, and downstream needs allow—often summer recreation band on southeastern USACE lakes. It is a rulebook number tied to a stated datum, not "as high as the dam can hold."
Conservation pool is the normal upper operating target on many USACE and utility reservoirs—often the same practical idea as summer full pool or recreation pool in public pool guides. It is a published elevation in a stated datum, not informal “looks full.”
Winter pool is the lower seasonal target many USACE reservoirs hold after fall drawdown—freeing flood storage and reducing ice/wind fetch stress on docks. It is published beside full pool in rule curves with the same datum discipline.
Drawdown is the deliberate lowering of a reservoir's stage—seasonal, flood-management, or maintenance-driven. A falling hydrograph during drawdown is often expected, not a sign the lake is "broken."
Flood pool is the authorized storage band above normal full pool on many managed reservoirs—space reserved to catch flood inflows before releases or spillway use. It is a project rulebook elevation, not the same as flood stage on a river gauge.
A pool guide is the operator’s published schedule of target elevations—full pool, winter pool, flood pool, and sometimes intermediate bands. It is the rulebook; a gauge reading is the measurement at a sensor.
Flood stage is a published threshold where water begins to impact life or property at a specific gauge location—common on rivers and some reservoir tailwaters. It is not the same as a dam's flood pool storage band above recreation full on an impoundment.
Agencies behind gages, forecasts, and reservoir operating data.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) collects and publishes inland water observations—streamgages, lake levels, and related datasets—that feed many third-party lake apps and research products.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is the federal umbrella for weather, climate, coastal, and inland flood services—including river forecast centers and the National Water Model.
The Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) designs, operates, and reports data for many western reservoirs—storage, deliveries, and published pool information tied to congressional authorizations.
The National Weather Service (NWS) is NOAA’s forecast office network—issuing weather, water, and hazard products used before launch, during tournaments, and in flood response near reservoirs.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) builds and operates many major U.S. reservoirs. On Lake Insights, USACE projects often supply pool guides, conservation and flood pools, and project gage data for southeastern impoundments.
NWPS (National Water Prediction Service) is NOAA’s presentation layer for river forecasts—often what people mean by “NOAA river forecasts” on inland waters. It complements NWS weather products and USACE pool data.
Flow, forecasts, and readings below dams and on inflows.
A hydrograph is a graph of stage or discharge over time—how fast water rose or fell through a storm or drawdown. It turns a single elevation reading into trend context.
Tailwater is the river reach immediately downstream of a dam—where releases shape stage and current. Tailwater gauges can rise while the reservoir pool looks stable, or the reverse during drawdown.
Discharge is the volume rate of water passing a cross-section—commonly cubic feet per second (cfs) on USGS products. Stage can stay flat while discharge swings during gate changes.
A streamgage is a USGS (or partner) site measuring stage and often discharge on a river or stream. Streamgages on inflows or tailwaters help explain reservoir behavior but are not always at the main pool gage.
Bassmaster is the flagship tournament and media brand of B.A.S.S. (Bass Anglers Sportsman Society)—best known for the Bassmaster Elite Series, Opens, and the Bassmaster Classic, which drive major lake-tourism and host-community spending.
Major League Fishing (MLF) is a professional bass-fishing league and media property known for timed, weigh-in-forward tournament formats, the REDCREST championship, and national broadcasts that put host lakes in front of touring audiences.