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Using in situ vertical displacements to characterize changes in moisture load
Author(s) -
Murdoch Lawrence C.,
Freeman Clay E.,
Germanovich Leonid N.,
Thrash Colby,
DeWolf Scott
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1002/2015wr017335
Subject(s) - extensometer , water content , displacement (psychology) , calibration , environmental science , soil science , evapotranspiration , geotechnical engineering , moisture , load cell , hydrology (agriculture) , volume (thermodynamics) , geology , materials science , mathematics , structural engineering , composite material , psychology , ecology , statistics , engineering , psychotherapist , biology , physics , quantum mechanics
Changes in soil moisture content alter the load on underlying material, and we have developed a technique for characterizing this effect by using an extensometer to measure the displacement caused by the load change. The extensometer is pushed into soil at depths of 5 m or more, and displacement between two anchors separated by ∼1.5 m is measured with a resolution of better than 0.01 μm (10 − 8 m). The instrument is sensitive to load changes at the ground surface within a radial distance that is roughly twice its depth, potentially providing a method for averaging changes in water content over hundreds of m 2 or more. During a field trial at a site in South Carolina, compressive displacements in unsaturated saprolite were strongly correlated to rainfall with a calibration factor of 0.16 μm displacement per mm of rainfall ±0.002 μm/mm ( R 2 = 0.95). Estimates of the net change in water volume per unit area made using the calibration factor from rainfall were similar to independent estimates of evapotranspiration. The technique was affected by barometric pressure variations, but the sensitivity was less than expected and does not hinder meaningful application. A companion instrument demonstrated the displacement signal was repeatable.