EARTH · RIVERS & FLOODS · UNITED STATES
Platte River Level & Flow
The latest reading on the Platte River at Louisville, NE — from the USGS streamgage, reporting gage height (feet) and streamflow (cubic feet per second). The famously broad, shallow river of the Great Plains — a vital stopover for migrating sandhill cranes.The figure below is live, shown with the time it was taken, and framed as a measurement of flow — never a flood verdict.
What this reading means
Gage height is how high the water stands at the gage, in feet; streamflow is how much water is moving past, in cubic feet per second. Both rise and fall with rain, snowmelt and upstream dams. A high number here means the Platte River is running full — but whether that is flooding depends on this river’s own banks and its official flood stage, which this page does not assert. It shows the measurement and its context, not a safe/unsafe verdict.
About this reading
This reading comes from a US Geological Survey streamgage on the Platte River at Louisville, NE. USGS gages report instantaneous values every 15–60 minutes; the newest figure above is the most recent the gage has transmitted. US federal data, public domain.
Nearby rivers
The closest rivers to the Platte River— compare how much water each is moving.