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Description: Book cover
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED
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Description: Book cover
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED

TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED

TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED

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Description: Book cover
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED
Abstract
Stormwater runoff is currently perceived as a major source of pollutants discharged to the coastal oceans of southern California, but the quality and quantity of stormwater runoff is highly variable. In this study, nearly 2,000 samples were collected at 15-min intervals during the 1997/98 wet season from the Santa Ana River, an urbanized watershed in Orange County, California, to assess the magnitude of seasonal flushing and to assess pollutant variability within and among storm events. All samples were analyzed for total suspended solids (TSS); and a selected subset was analyzed for total organic carbon (TOC), total nitrogen (TN), and trace metals (cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, nickel, and zinc). Flow ranged up to five orders of magnitude and constituent concentrations routinely varied among storms by two orders of magnitude. Flow was the largest factor that accounted for changes in TSS concentrations. Significant seasonal flushing was observed. There were 220 non-rain days prior to the season's first event, and the first four storms had significantly higher concentrations of TSS and trace metals than the remaining storms of the season.
Stormwater runoff is currently perceived as a major source of pollutants discharged to the coastal oceans of southern California, but the quality and quantity of stormwater runoff is highly variable. In this study, nearly 2,000 samples were collected at 15-min intervals during the 1997/98 wet season from the Santa Ana River, an urbanized watershed in Orange County, California, to assess the...
Author(s)
Liesl L. TiefenthalerKenneth C. Schiff
SourceProceedings of the Water Environment Federation
SubjectSession 4: Wet Weather Pollutant Sources and Implementation Approaches
Document typeConference Paper
PublisherWater Environment Federation
Print publication date Jan, 2005
ISSN1938-6478
SICI1938-6478(20050101)2005:3L.375;1-
DOI10.2175/193864705783966837
Volume / Issue2005 / 3
Content sourceTMDLS Conference
First / last page(s)375 - 387
Copyright2005
Word count188

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Description: Book cover
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED
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Description: Book cover
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED
Abstract
Stormwater runoff is currently perceived as a major source of pollutants discharged to the coastal oceans of southern California, but the quality and quantity of stormwater runoff is highly variable. In this study, nearly 2,000 samples were collected at 15-min intervals during the 1997/98 wet season from the Santa Ana River, an urbanized watershed in Orange County, California, to assess the magnitude of seasonal flushing and to assess pollutant variability within and among storm events. All samples were analyzed for total suspended solids (TSS); and a selected subset was analyzed for total organic carbon (TOC), total nitrogen (TN), and trace metals (cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, nickel, and zinc). Flow ranged up to five orders of magnitude and constituent concentrations routinely varied among storms by two orders of magnitude. Flow was the largest factor that accounted for changes in TSS concentrations. Significant seasonal flushing was observed. There were 220 non-rain days prior to the season's first event, and the first four storms had significantly higher concentrations of TSS and trace metals than the remaining storms of the season.
Stormwater runoff is currently perceived as a major source of pollutants discharged to the coastal oceans of southern California, but the quality and quantity of stormwater runoff is highly variable. In this study, nearly 2,000 samples were collected at 15-min intervals during the 1997/98 wet season from the Santa Ana River, an urbanized watershed in Orange County, California, to assess the...
Author(s)
Liesl L. TiefenthalerKenneth C. Schiff
SourceProceedings of the Water Environment Federation
SubjectSession 4: Wet Weather Pollutant Sources and Implementation Approaches
Document typeConference Paper
PublisherWater Environment Federation
Print publication date Jan, 2005
ISSN1938-6478
SICI1938-6478(20050101)2005:3L.375;1-
DOI10.2175/193864705783966837
Volume / Issue2005 / 3
Content sourceTMDLS Conference
First / last page(s)375 - 387
Copyright2005
Word count188

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Liesl L. Tiefenthaler# Kenneth C. Schiff. TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED. Alexandria, VA 22314-1994, USA: Water Environment Federation, 2018. Web. 4 Jul. 2025. <https://www.accesswater.org?id=-292313CITANCHOR>.
Liesl L. Tiefenthaler# Kenneth C. Schiff. TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED. Alexandria, VA 22314-1994, USA: Water Environment Federation, 2018. Accessed July 4, 2025. https://www.accesswater.org/?id=-292313CITANCHOR.
Liesl L. Tiefenthaler# Kenneth C. Schiff
TEMPORAL VARIABILITY PATTERNS OF STORMWATER CONCENTRATIONS IN A LARGE URBAN WATERSHED
Access Water
Water Environment Federation
December 22, 2018
July 4, 2025
https://www.accesswater.org/?id=-292313CITANCHOR