Peters Creek is a 16.8-mile-long (27.0 km)[1] tributary of the Monongahela River and part of the Mississippi River watershed, flowing through southwestern Pennsylvania in the United States.
Peters Creek starts in Nottingham Township in Washington County and joins the Monongahela River at Clairton in Allegheny County.
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The Peters Creek watershed is a diverse fifty square miles in southwestern Allegheny County and northeastern Washington County. From the heavy industry in the east where Peters Creek enters the Monongahela River, to the commercial northeast, the suburban northern communities, and the still rural and farming south, the watershed is a veritable patchwork of land use types. There is also a county park, a turnpike, a landfill, and a coal mining legacy to add to the mix. Some communities are relatively stable while others are undergoing rapid development. Peters Creek and its tributaries provide utility to them all in a myriad of ways.
Peters Creek also collects numerous unnamed tributaries along its course.
Because of past water quality issues, Peters Creek was not considered to have any recreational purpose. But since the 1990s the water quality has improved dramatically. Formerly considered a "dead" stream, Peters Creek serves as a great example of just how much of a difference can be made through the efforts of the people. Once plagued with garbage and acid mine drainage, the water quality is now high enough to support its own fish population, which includes trout, bass, catfish, carp, and bluegill. It is now again possible to enjoy the stream through such activities as fishing, swimming, and during high water, kayaking. There is also a new bike trail that runs along its bank, formerly part of the Montour Railroad.[2]