Publication | Closed Access
Urban Runoff Quality Characterization and Load Estimation in Saskatoon, Canada
65
Citations
15
References
2006
Year
EngineeringSouth Saskatchewan RiverSaskatchewan EnvironmentEnvironmental Impact AssessmentWater Quality ManagementWater Quality ForecastingCatchment ScaleHydrological ModelingSurface RunoffUrban HydrologyGeographyWater QualityHydrologyRunoffWater ResourcesUrban RunoffEnvironmental EngineeringCivil EngineeringStormwater ManagementLoad EstimationFlood Risk Management
The improvement in the effluent quality of the treated sanitary sewage entering the South Saskatchewan River at Saskatoon, Canada, and the impending change in provincial legislation governing urban runoff, provided the impetus for Saskatchewan Environment to initiate the stormwater runoff quality study reported in this paper. Among others, the study involved a field program for characterizing the urban runoff water quality from four catchments, each representing a different type of land use. Both a site mean concentration approach and a multiple variable regression analysis approach were used to quantify the pollutant load contained within the runoff. Thereafter, using the runoff water quality characterizations developed in the study, rainfall–runoff pollutant loads from the entire city were estimated and compared with two local point sources to the receiving stream. On the basis of this analysis, it was found that urban runoff contributes more total suspended solids and total Kjeldahl nitrogen load, similar chemical oxygen demand load, and slightly less total phosphorus load than the two local point sources.
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