Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Spatiotemporal Variation of Land-Use and Land-Cover in the Nairobi River Watershed, and Its Effects on the Inorganic Geochemistry of Nairobi River

Muchemi, Francis
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract

Determining the effects of LULC and development on natural resources is necessary for sustainability. This study focused on LULC changes in NRW over the past 3 decades and the effects it had on the geochemistry of NR channel’s sediment. Impervious surfaces increased from 2.5% to 11.9%. Samples from the urban class had elevated levels of contaminants than other classes. The concentrations of major inorganic elements were normal compared to the juvenile UCC except MnO and P2O5 that were heterogeneously distributed and significantly enriched. Heavy metals exhibited high DR than USEPA SSL in urban. Pb, Ce and Sb had the highest concentration of 3400, 769 and 187.5 ppm respectively in the urban class. Heterogeneously distributed and enriched elements like Pb, Y, Yb, Zr, Er,Ce, Zn, Lu, Sm, Th, Nd etc., were attributed to humans’ input. Minerals identified were smectite, kaolinite, quartz, anorthoclase and critobalite? Sediments’ alteration decreased down the river gradient.

Comments
Description
Date
2018-05-02
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Nairobi River Watershed, Land-use and Land-cover, Geochemistry, Remote Sensing, GIS, Mineralogy
Citation
Muchemi, Francis. Spatiotemporal Variation of Land-Use and Land-Cover in the Nairobi River Watershed, and Its Effects on the Inorganic Geochemistry of Nairobi River. May 2018, Georgia State University. https://doi.org/10.57709/12008150.
Embargo Lift Date
2018-04-23
Embedded videos