Montour Run is a tributary of Fishing Creek in Columbia County, Pennsylvania. It is the last named tributary to join the creek and is long. The stream's watershed has an area of approximately 4.7 square miles and is located in Montour Township, Columbia County and Cooper Township, Montour County. The annual load of sediment in the watershed is , most of which comes from agricultural lands. live in the stream.
A. Joseph Armstrong called the stream "undistinguished" and "not an impressive stream" in his book Trout Unlimited's Guide to Pennsylvania Limestone Streams.
Of the of sediment that flows through Montour Run per year, per year comes from croplands. comes from hay and pastures, comes from , and comes from land classified as "transition" by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Annually, of sediment in the stream comes from land classified as "low-intensity development" by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and per year comes from forests. No sediment in the watershed comes from wetlands.
Most of the streams in the watershed of Montour Run do not meet the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's water quality standards, but a tributary in the northwestern reaches of the watershed do meet the standards.
The average annual rainfall in the Montour Run watershed between 1976 and 1992 was . The average annual Surface runoff during this time period was . The stream has a high water temperature.
50 percent of the rock in the watershed of Montour Run is shale 25 percent is sandstone, 20 percent is interbedding sedimentary rock. The remaining 5 percent is carbonate rock. The Mahantango Formation is found in the lower reaches of the Montour Run watershed, as is the Marcellus Formation. Both of these formations are from the Middle Devonian.
95 percent of the soil in the Montour Run watershed is in the hydrologic soil group B, while 5 percent is in the hydrologic soil group C.
Montour Run is wide. The banks of the stream experience erosion.
Hay and pastures occupy 800.6 acres of the watershed of Montour Run and 538.7 acres of the watershed are occupied by cropland.
There are NWI wetlands and steep slopes on the lower reaches of Montour Run.
There are of streams in the Montour Run watershed.
A stone arch bridge was built over the stream near Bloomsburg in 1880 and it underwent repair in 1927. It is long and as of 2009, 150 vehicles per day travel over it.
The riparian buffer is limited in some places along Montour Run. Conservation farming is not practiced in the upper reaches of the watershed.
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