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Lateral water flux in the unsaturated zone: A mechanism for the formation of spatial soil heterogeneity in a headwater catchment
Authors:John P Gannon  Kevin J McGuire  Scott W Bailey  Rebecca R Bourgault  Donald S Ross
Institution:1. Department of Geoscience and Natural Resources, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC, USA;2. Virginia Water Resources Research Center & Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Blacksburg, VA, USA;3. U.S. Forest Service Northern Research Station, Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, North Woodstock, NH, USA;4. Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Sciences, 107 Greenhouse Bldg, Delaware Valley University, Doylestown, PA, USA;5. 260 Jeffords Hall, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA
Abstract:Measurements of soil water potential and water table fluctuations suggest that morphologically distinct soils in a headwater catchment at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire formed as a result of variations in saturated and unsaturated hydrologic fluxes in the mineral soil. Previous work showed that each group of these soils had distinct water table fluctuations in response to precipitation; however, observed variations in soil morphology also occurred above the maximum height of observed saturation. Variations in unsaturated fluxes have been hypothesized to explain differences in soil horizon thickness and presence/absence of specific horizons but have not been explicitly investigated. We examined tensiometer and shallow groundwater well records to identify differences in unsaturated water fluxes among podzols that show distinct morphological and chemical differences. The lack of vertical hydraulic gradients at the study sites suggests that lateral unsaturated flow occurs in several of the soil units. We propose that the variations in soil horizon thickness and presence/absence observed at the site are due in part to slope‐parallel water flux in the unsaturated portion of the solum. In addition, unsaturated flow may be involved in the translocation of spodic material that primes those areas to contribute water with distinct chemistry to the stream network and represents a potential source/sink of organometallic compounds in the landscape.
Keywords:hillslope hydrology  hydropedology  pedogenesis  soil science  stream chemistry  unsaturated flow
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