Geophysical surveys as a tool to reveal subsurface stratification at small agricutural headwater catchment: a case study
2021
Jeřábek, Jakub | Zumr, David | European Commission | Czech Technical University in Prague
Project Co-ordinators: Dr. Jose Alfonso Gómez Calero (Instituto de Agricultura Sostenible (IAS-CISC), Dr. Weifeng Xu (Fujian Agriculture and Forest University, FAFU).-- Trabajo desarrollado bajo la financiación del proyecto “Soil Hydrology research platform underpinning innovation to manage water scarcity in European and Chinese cropping Systems” (773903), coordinado por José Alfonso Gómez Calero, investigador del Instituto de Agricultura Sostenible (IAS).
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Catchment drainage area is a basic spatial unit in landscape hydrology within which the authorities estimate a water balance and manage water resources. The catchment drainage area is commonly delineated based on the surface topography, which is determined using a digital elevation model. Therefore, only a flow over the surface is implicitly considered. However, a substantial portion of the rainfall water infiltrates and percolates through the soil profile to the groundwater, where geological structures control the drainage area instead of the topography of the soil surface. The discrepancy between the surface topography-based and bedrock-based drainage area can cause large discrepancies in water balance calculation. It this paper we present an investigation of the subsurface media stratification in a headwater catchment in the central part of the Czech Republic using a geophysical survey method - electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). Results indicate that the complexity of the subsurface geological layers cannot be estimated solely from the land surface topography. Although shallow layers copy the shape of the surface, the deeper layers do not. This finding has a strong implication on the water transport regime since it suggests that the deep drainage may follow different pathways and flow in other directions then the water in shallow soil profile or shallow subsurface structures.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]The field work, data analysis, and manuscript preparation were funded by the Horizon 2020 research and innovation program project 773903 - “Shui - Soil Hydrology research platform underpinning innovation to manage water scarcity in European and Chinese cropping systems,” funded by the European Union, and by the Grant Agency of the Czech Technical University in Prague project no. SGS20/157/OHK1/3T/11 - “Experimentání výzkum a modelování komplexních fyzikálních procesů v půdním prostředí”.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Peer reviewed
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Mots clés AGROVOC
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