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Page 1: Runoff and Erosion

Runoff and Erosion

Page 2: Runoff and Erosion

Surface water excess• the free water on the soil surface whenever the

water supply rate exceeds the infiltration rate

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Surface storage capacity

• the volume of water per unit area which can be held on the soil surface before runoff begins

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Surface runoff• the amount of water that flows downslope along the

surface– overland flow– channel flow or stream flow

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Good or bad?

• p. 286 “Uncontrolled runoff is never desirable…”

• Quantity vs. quality• Runoff inducement– mechanical treatments– chemical treatments

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El Mustaqbal is a Bedouin school located c 10km southeast to Beer Sheva. The school maintains a small garden (Bustan) based on rain water harvesting.

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Runoff reduction

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Runoff Prediction

• Curve Number Method– Developed by Soil Conservation Service (now NRCS)– Purely empirical– Widely used

• Mechanistic models– Rainfall, soil properties, and land use must be known– First, simulate infiltration– Second, simulate overland flow process– Example: Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP)

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Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP)• Developed by the Agricultural Research

Service, National Soil Erosion Research Laboratory

• Infiltration simulation driven by the Green-Ampt model

• Hydraulic conductivity in the model is influenced by tillage, crusting, surface cover, and storm precipitation amount.

• Runoff predicted by surface water excess

• Online version prototype: http://milford.nserl.purdue.edu/

NSERL, West Lafayette, Indiana

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Reading assignment

• Soil erosion, p.287-295 & p. 359-361• An Urgent Appeal for Soil Stewardship

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A farmer and his two sons during a dust storm in Cimarron County, Oklahoma, 1936. Photo: Arthur Rothstein

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Lubbock, Texas, October 17, 2011

Goodwell, Oklahoma, June 4, 1937

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Photo source: http://www.greatmirror.com

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Oklahoma State University, 315 Student Union, Student Union Theater6:45 p.m., Monday, November 5, 2012

Ken Burns’ The Dust Bowl: A Special Advanced Screening & Community Conversation Featuring Congressman Frank Lucas

DR. BOB STEWARTDIRECTOR DRYLAND AGRICULTURE INSTITUTEWEST TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY “Global Agricultural and Environmental Issues” Monday, November 5, 2012FAPC, Room 201Welcome reception with refreshments, 3:00 p.m. Lecture, 3:30 p.m.

Plant and Soil Sciences Distinguished Speaker Series

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Soil erosion stages

• Detachment• Transport• Deposition

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Detachment

• Water– Raindrop impact– Runoff scour

• Wind – gusts

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Detachment

• Water– Raindrop impact– Runoff scour

• Wind – gusts

• Depends on:– surface cover, soil strength, rain intensity, wind or

water flow velocity, etc…

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Transport• Water– Sheet–Rill–Gully

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Source: Soil Erosion and Its Control, Q.C. Ayres, 1936, McGraw-Hill

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Creep in Barnes Co., ND Slump near Bismark, ND

Same slump nine months later.

Source: http://www.ndsu.edu/nd_geology/nd_mass_wasting/index_mass_wasting.htm

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A massive landslide occurred in the Las Colinas neighborhood of Santa Tecla, El Salvador, Central America as a result of the M=7.6 earthquake of January 13, 2001.

http://landslides.usgs.gov/research/other/centralamerica.php

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Transport• Water– Sheet–Rill–Gully

• Wind– Surface creep (d > 0.5 mm)– Saltation (0.1 < d < 0.5 mm)– Suspension (d < 0.1 mm)

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Transport• Water– Sheet–Rill–Gully

• Wind– Surface creep (d > 0.5 mm)– Saltation (0.1 < d < 0.5 mm)– Suspension (d < 0.1 mm)

• Depends on:–flow velocity, particle size, particle density

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Reading assignment

• “Mechanical Analysis” p.45-47

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Deposition• Initiated by a decrease in the flow velocity• Approximated by Stokes’ Law:– the settling velocity of a spherical particle is

proportional to its radius squared (r2)• To apply we assume:– soil particles are spherical– the suspension is dilute enough that the particles

do not interact with each other– the fluid flow is laminar (not turbulent)

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• Drag force = viscosity

• Force of gravity

• At terminal velocity• Solve for velocity

Stokes LawruFd 6

grF fsg 3

34

dg FF

18

2fsgd

u

http://www.answers.com/topic/stokes-law

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Deposition example

• A pulse of sediment laden runoff is delivered to a pond. About how long will it take for soil particles with diameters of the following sizes to settle to a depth of 1 m?

– 5 x 10-2 mm (fine sand)– 5 x 10-3 mm (silt)– 5 x 10-4 mm (clay)

= 1 x 10-3 kg m-1 s-1

s = 2650 kg m-3

18

2fsgd

u

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Sediment transport and deposition

• Major issue in streams, reservoirs, and coastal areas

• Major driver for spatial variability in floodplain soils

• Management concern for agriculture, construction, and engineering

http://blackwarriorriver.org/siltation-sedimentation.html

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Reading assignment

• Redistribution of soil moisture– p. 297-303