Synthesis of surface water hydrology ...
The drainage system of the study area consists of a number of rivers draining from the west and from the east into the Athabasca River north of Fort McMurray, as well as a few rivers which join the Athabasca near Fort McMurray and drain areas to the south and east. Runoff from within the study area...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Alberta Library
1979
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.7939/r30r9m68v https://ualberta.scholaris.ca/handle/123456789/44068 |
_version_ | 1835012163228401664 |
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author | Evans, B. J. Neill, C. R. |
author_facet | Evans, B. J. Neill, C. R. |
author_sort | Evans, B. J. |
collection | Unknown |
description | The drainage system of the study area consists of a number of rivers draining from the west and from the east into the Athabasca River north of Fort McMurray, as well as a few rivers which join the Athabasca near Fort McMurray and drain areas to the south and east. Runoff from within the study area itself contributes less than 10% of the average flow in the Athabasca River at the northern boundary of the study area. Roughly 60% of annual runoff occurs in the 4-month period April through July. Runoff represents on the average only about 20% of the precipitation that falls on the area, the remainder being returned to the atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration. Although snowfall constitutes only about 30% of precipitation, its proportional contribution to runoff is generally much greater. On the east slopes of the Birch Mountains, runoff from rainfall appears to be remarkably small. Although the spatial variability of average runoff over the study area is not well defined by available streamflow data, it ... |
format | Report |
genre | Athabasca River Fort McMurray |
genre_facet | Athabasca River Fort McMurray |
geographic | Athabasca River Birch Mountains Fort McMurray |
geographic_facet | Athabasca River Birch Mountains Fort McMurray |
id | ftdatacite:10.7939/r30r9m68v |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
long_lat | ENVELOPE(-113.169,-113.169,57.500,57.500) |
op_collection_id | ftdatacite |
op_doi | https://doi.org/10.7939/r30r9m68v |
op_rights | This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user. |
publishDate | 1979 |
publisher | University of Alberta Library |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftdatacite:10.7939/r30r9m68v 2025-06-15T14:22:42+00:00 Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... Evans, B. J. Neill, C. R. 1979 https://dx.doi.org/10.7939/r30r9m68v https://ualberta.scholaris.ca/handle/123456789/44068 en eng University of Alberta Library This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user. Oil Sands AOSERP AOSERP Report 60 Oil sands Tar Sands Tar sands Athabasca River Alberta Hydrology AOSERP WS 1.1.1 report Text Report 1979 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7939/r30r9m68v 2025-06-02T13:11:13Z The drainage system of the study area consists of a number of rivers draining from the west and from the east into the Athabasca River north of Fort McMurray, as well as a few rivers which join the Athabasca near Fort McMurray and drain areas to the south and east. Runoff from within the study area itself contributes less than 10% of the average flow in the Athabasca River at the northern boundary of the study area. Roughly 60% of annual runoff occurs in the 4-month period April through July. Runoff represents on the average only about 20% of the precipitation that falls on the area, the remainder being returned to the atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration. Although snowfall constitutes only about 30% of precipitation, its proportional contribution to runoff is generally much greater. On the east slopes of the Birch Mountains, runoff from rainfall appears to be remarkably small. Although the spatial variability of average runoff over the study area is not well defined by available streamflow data, it ... Report Athabasca River Fort McMurray Unknown Athabasca River Birch Mountains ENVELOPE(-113.169,-113.169,57.500,57.500) Fort McMurray |
spellingShingle | Oil Sands AOSERP AOSERP Report 60 Oil sands Tar Sands Tar sands Athabasca River Alberta Hydrology AOSERP WS 1.1.1 Evans, B. J. Neill, C. R. Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title | Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title_full | Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title_fullStr | Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title_short | Synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
title_sort | synthesis of surface water hydrology ... |
topic | Oil Sands AOSERP AOSERP Report 60 Oil sands Tar Sands Tar sands Athabasca River Alberta Hydrology AOSERP WS 1.1.1 |
topic_facet | Oil Sands AOSERP AOSERP Report 60 Oil sands Tar Sands Tar sands Athabasca River Alberta Hydrology AOSERP WS 1.1.1 |
url | https://dx.doi.org/10.7939/r30r9m68v https://ualberta.scholaris.ca/handle/123456789/44068 |