Title of article
Assessment of chemical water types and their spatial variation using multi-stage cluster analysis, Queensland, Australia
Author/Authors
Vivienne H. McNeil، نويسنده , , Malcolm E. Cox، نويسنده , , Micaela Preda، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
20
From page
181
To page
200
Abstract
A multivariate assessment has been adapted to the classification of a large, irregular dataset of approximately 34,000 surface water samples accumulated over more than 30 years. A two-stage K-means clustering method was designed to analyse chemical data in the form of percentages of major ions (Na, Mg, Ca, Cl, HCO3 and SO4); the first stage of clustering produced 347 groups, which were then re-clustered to generate the final nine water types. The analysis enabled the definition of provinces of water composition and highlighted natural processes influencing the surface water chemistry. On a statewide basis, sodium is the dominant cation and around 50% at all stream flows, while proportions of calcium and magnesium are about equal. Chloride and bicarbonate constitute the bulk of anions present, while sulfate occurs occasionally and tends to be localised. On a global basis, Queensland surface waters are relatively high in sodium, chloride and magnesium, and low in calcium and sulfate. It was also found that the geographical location has a greater impact on major ion ratios than does the stage of stream flow.
Keywords
cluster analysis , Water quality , Major ions , Salinity , Freshwater , Stream flow , Gauging station , Queensland
Journal title
Journal of Hydrology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Hydrology
Record number
1098591
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