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Rain, rock moisture dynamics, and the rapid response of perched groundwater in weathered, fractured argillite underlying a steep hillslope
by
Dietrich, William E.
, Rempe, Daniella M.
, Salve, Rohit
in
Aeration zone
/ Bedrock
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ GEOSCIENCES
/ Groundwater
/ hill slope hydrology
/ Moisture availability
/ Moisture content
/ Perched groundwater
/ Rainy season
/ rock moisture
/ Rocks
/ Runoff
2012
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Rain, rock moisture dynamics, and the rapid response of perched groundwater in weathered, fractured argillite underlying a steep hillslope
by
Dietrich, William E.
, Rempe, Daniella M.
, Salve, Rohit
in
Aeration zone
/ Bedrock
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ GEOSCIENCES
/ Groundwater
/ hill slope hydrology
/ Moisture availability
/ Moisture content
/ Perched groundwater
/ Rainy season
/ rock moisture
/ Rocks
/ Runoff
2012
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Rain, rock moisture dynamics, and the rapid response of perched groundwater in weathered, fractured argillite underlying a steep hillslope
by
Dietrich, William E.
, Rempe, Daniella M.
, Salve, Rohit
in
Aeration zone
/ Bedrock
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ GEOSCIENCES
/ Groundwater
/ hill slope hydrology
/ Moisture availability
/ Moisture content
/ Perched groundwater
/ Rainy season
/ rock moisture
/ Rocks
/ Runoff
2012
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Rain, rock moisture dynamics, and the rapid response of perched groundwater in weathered, fractured argillite underlying a steep hillslope
Journal Article
Rain, rock moisture dynamics, and the rapid response of perched groundwater in weathered, fractured argillite underlying a steep hillslope
2012
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Overview
Various field studies have concluded that shallow groundwater in weathered bedrock underlying hillslopes can contribute to both base and stormflow and thus dominate runoff. The processes associated with recharge from the ground surface, through this unsaturated zone, have received little study, yet they influence runoff dynamics, the chemical evolution of water, and moisture availability. Here we use five measurement systems to document soil and rock moisture dynamics within a 4000 m2zero‐order basin in which all runoff occurs through weathered argillite. At this site, the weathered bedrock zone (in which the groundwater fluctuates by 8 m seasonally) varies in depth from ∼4 m at the base of the hillslope to nearly 19 m near the hill top. An aggregate‐rich, porous, 0.5 m thick soil overlies the weathered bedrock. We find that during the first rains of the wet season, water rapidly travels meters into the weathered bedrock zone. Consistently, however, groundwater at some places responds quickly to the first major storm, well before the wetting front has been detected much beyond about 1 m. Furthermore, throughout the wet season, the lower portion of the unsaturated weathered bedrock shows little or no moisture change. These observations suggest a fracture‐dominated flow path, leading to a highly variably groundwater response across the hillslope for a given storm. Seasonal changes in rock moisture content are greatest in the first 5 to 10 m depth and may exceed the magnitude of moisture changes in the soil, suggesting that it could constitute a significant unmapped moisture reservoir.
Key Points
Significant seasonal rock moisture dynamic zone in shallow weathered bedrock
Rapid unsaturated flow mediates runoff response
First storm groundwater response precedes wetting front
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd,John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Subject
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