[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-glossary-cfs":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"aliases":6,"body":9,"category":28,"definitionShort":29,"description":15,"disciplineTags":30,"extension":32,"meta":33,"navigation":34,"path":35,"relatedCards":36,"relatedTerms":37,"seo":40,"sourceRef":41,"stem":42,"term":43,"__hash__":44},"learn_glossary\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fcfs.md","Cfs",[7,8],"Cubic feet per second","Cubic-feet-per-second",{"type":10,"value":11,"toc":24},"minimark",[12,16],[13,14,15],"p",{},"CFS is the standard flow unit on every USGS streamgage in the country.\nA small mountain creek might run 30–80 CFS. A storied trout river like\nthe Madison runs 800–1500 CFS. The Mississippi at New Orleans is\n~600,000 CFS.",[13,17,18,19,23],{},"For a given river, what matters isn't the absolute number — it's where\ntoday's reading falls inside the river's ",[20,21,22],"em",{},"fishable band",". FishCast's\nflow score tells you that directly: same 320 CFS reading is \"perfect\"\non the Provo and \"raging\" on a small Catskill freestone.",{"title":25,"searchDepth":26,"depth":26,"links":27},"",2,[],"data","Cubic Feet per Second — the unit USGS gauges report flow in. One bucket of water (1 cubic foot) passing a fixed point every second.",[31],"general","md",{},true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary\u002Fcfs",[],[38,39],"flow","stage",{"description":15},null,"learn\u002Fglossary\u002Fcfs","CFS","33e3BGuRCShuc79-eFPCPHYQDGANovsR1LdFqeDL5Lk"]