December 1, 1999
Conference Paper

Water and Solute Transport in Arid Vadose Zones: Innovations in Measurement and Analysis

Abstract

Understanding the physics of flow and transport through the vadose zone has advanced significantly in the last three decades. These advances have been made primarily in humid regions or in irrigated agricultural settings. While some of the techniques are useful, many are not suited to arid regions. The fluxes of water and solutes typically found in arid regions are often orders of magnitude smaller than those found in agricultural settings, while the time scales for transport can be orders of magnitude larger. The depth over which transport must be characterized is also often much greater than in humid regions. Rather than relying on advances in applied tracers, arid-zone researchers have developed natural tracer techniques that are capable of quantifying transport over tens to thousands of years. Techniques have been developed to measure the hydraulic properties of sediments at all water contents, including the very dry range and at far greater depths. As arid and semiarid regions come under increased development pressures for such activities as hazardous- and radioactive-waste disoposal, the development of techniques and the understanding of water and solute transport have become crucial compontents in defining the enviornmental impacts of actvities at the landsurface.

Revised: November 10, 2005 | Published: December 1, 1999

Citation

Tyler S.W., B.R. Scanlon, G.W. Gee, and G.B. Allison. 1999. Water and Solute Transport in Arid Vadose Zones: Innovations in Measurement and Analysis. In Vadose Zone Hydrology: cutting across disciplines, edited by M. B. Parlange and J. W. Hopmans, 334-373. New York, New York:Oxford Press. PNNL-SA-31793.