The dataset was derived by the Bioregional Assessment Programme from multiple source datasets. The source datasets are identified in the Lineage field in this metadata statement. The processes undertaken to produce this derived dataset are described in the History field in this metadata statement.
Standard Hydrologic Response Variables (HRVs) are the hydrological characteristics of the system that are important for studying the impact of streamflow on the ecological variables which can potentially change due to coal resource development. These data refer to the standard HRVs for the Namoi subregion for the 54 simulation nodes. The nine standard HRVs were computed under CRDP and Baseline conditions, respectively and the ACRD is the difference between the Baseline and CRDP.
Selected ACRD future HRV normalized data from the source data, extracted and cross-tabulated in MS Access. Then exported as a table to be appended to the node features attribute table.
The full description of how the resource was created can be found in a readme file in the dataset itself at NIC\NAM\DATA\RiskAndUncertainty\HRV\NAM_Standard_HRVs
Bioregional Assessment Programme (2017) Namoi Surface Water standard HRV quantiles for Impact and Risk Analysis 20170718. Bioregional Assessment Derived Dataset. Viewed 11 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/1f61bfdf-4dc1-4a35-9b80-f0f6554d27ee.
Derived From Historical Mining Footprints DTIRIS NAM 20150914
Derived From Namoi AWRA-L model
Derived From GEODATA 9 second DEM and D8: Digital Elevation Model Version 3 and Flow Direction Grid 2008
Derived From Namoi Environmental Impact Statements - Mine footprints
Derived From River Styles Spatial Layer for New South Wales
Derived From Namoi Surface Water Mine Footprints - digitised
Derived From Namoi AWRA-R model implementation (post groundwater input)
Derived From National Surface Water sites Hydstra
Derived From Namoi Hydstra surface water time series v1 extracted 140814
Derived From Namoi AWRA-R (restricted input data implementation)
Derived From Namoi Existing Mine Development Surface Water Footprints