So… What is a Watershed, anyway?
Watersheds are defined by higher peaks and elevation in the landscape, and by the movement of water among landscapes.
When precipitation falls to the ground, it is the area of land that absorbs the water into the ground (groundwater) and also “sheds” or drains the water to lower elevation through rivers and streams (surface water).
Watersheds describe how units of land are connected by water flow.
Headwater watersheds are the most upstream watersheds that transform precipitation (rain, snow, sleet, anything that falls from the sky) into streamflow which eventually connect to larger bodies of water such as rivers, lakes, reservoirs, catchments, wetlands and, eventually, the ocean.
Headwater watersheds are often forested (or once were prior to agricultural expansion). As water naturally travels through the headwater watersheds to the flood plains and valleys, it erodes the surface it is traveling on, taking with it large amounts of sediment, metals, and other compounds that it comes into contact with.
A useful excerpt from the USDA handbook on stream restoration:
The Lake Helena Watershed is located in Lewis and Clark (68%) and Jefferson (32%) counties, within the Upper Missouri River Water Basin, encompassing 402,000 acres. Within the Lake Helena Watershed are the Silver, Tenmile and Prickly Pear Creek sub-watersheds.
The headwaters of these streams lie within the mountainous, forested lands of the Helena National Forest along the Continental Divide and the Elkhorn Mountains to the south.
All streams and connected groundwater systems within the watershed eventually make their way into Lake Helena and then the Missouri River, passing through the Helena Valley on their way. Lake Helena formed after the construction of the Hauser Dam, which flooded the wetland area where Silver, Tenmile, and Prickly Pear Creeks converged.
The Lake Helena Watershed is a large and geologically complex area. Both natural and man-made environmental impacts vary across the watershed. These impacts vary depending on the geology, vegetative structure and climate (natural impacts), as well as the intensity and complexity of both historic and current land use practices (man-made impacts).