The Chemical Composition of Precipitation in Madrid.

Autor: Hontoria, C.1 kirah@eda.etsia.upm.es, Saa, A.1, Almorox, J.1, Cuadra, L.2, Sánchez, A.2, Gascó, J. M.1
Předmět:
Zdroj: Water, Air & Soil Pollution. Jun2003, Vol. 146 Issue 1-4, p35-54. 20p.
Abstrakt: The present study examines the chemical characteristics of first-fraction precipitation samples collected over a period of one year in Madrid, and patterns of temporal and spatial variation observed in their composition. One hundred and sixty-four samples of wet precipitation collected on an event basis were analysed for anions, cations, pH and electrical conductivity. Precipitation in Madrid was neutral, with only 3% of samples showing pH < 5.6. Dominant ions were calcium and sulphates. Calcium was the principal neutralizing agent, explaining 64% of all nitrates and sulphates. The marine influence did not appear to be relevant, while the soil seemed to play an important role in the composition of precipitation. Precipitation chemistry displayed seasonal differences, with higher concentrations of sulphates and chloride in autumn and winter and of calcium and sodium in the summer. There was an inverse relationship between concentrations and sample volumes; while the correlation between concentrations and the time elapsed since the last rain event was positive, though poor for normalized concentrations. Four variables (sample volume, days elapsed since the last rain event, maximum wind gust direction and season) explained to a large extent (more than 90% for some sampling stations) the variability of certain chemical variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE