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I'm not convinced those are midnight to midnight measurements. Noon to noon seem to make more sense. Interesting that it says last gauge reading was at 1:30pm which would imply the lines being midnight to midnight.
If you don't know where you're going, then any path will get you there.
Could be that way because of the delay between snow melt and runoff. If the snow melts at 10k at noon, it takes time for the water to get downstream. Similar to how June 20th is the longest day of the year, but not the hottest; there is a delay between the discharge and the peak.
The lag has to do with the distance from the gaging station to where the snow is melting. In this case, the station is a number of miles from the main snow pack areas along the canyons surrounding the upper Merced. It takes hours for the snow to melt in the peak sun in the afternoon, trickle through snow packs, collect in streams, and eventually flow all the way down to Happy Isles where the gage shown above is located.You'll see a similar effect for other stream gages. Those gages close to the snowpack will peak in the evening. Those further downstream peak later. See for instanct the T and M together on one graph at https://waterdata.usgs.gov/ca/nwis/uv?s ... 5&period=7 . The T peaks a few hours earlier than the M due to the distances involved. (Jim, if you point at that graph you will see the time pop up too.)