See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: Coastal Wetlands, Treatment Wetlands, and Wetland Methods (includes Graduate Student Competition)
Abstract:
To better understand preferential flow mechanisms in wetlands, we developed a novel application of ground-penetrating radar (GPR) technology to non-invasively detect the channels (also called pipes and macropores). Using algorithms created to process the sets of raw GPR scan data and automatically identify and map the contiguous subsurface structures, the first known maps of subsurface preferential flow pathways in a riparian wetland system have been generated.
The presentation will describe the procedures developed and show the soil channel maps created from the first field trial of this application. Soil cores taken from points indicated by the map as containing or not containing soil channels will be shown to validate the mapping results. This innovative application of GPR should provide a practical approach for scientists to study and quantify the impact of preferential flow channels on water quality and integrate these effects into hydrologic models. Resource managers, environmental policy makers, and scientists will benefit from an improved understanding of the hydrological systems underlying these watersheds.
See more from this Division: S10 Wetland Soils
See more from this Session: Coastal Wetlands, Treatment Wetlands, and Wetland Methods (includes Graduate Student Competition)