Vertical drainage may improve soil salinity and moisture
Authors
Abdul Karim YusufzaiMark E. Grismer
Authors Affiliations
A. K. Yusufzai is Associate Engineering Geologist, Regional Water Quality Control Board, San Francisco Bay Region; M. E. Grismer is Associate Professor, Hydrologic Science, UC Davis.Publication Information
Hilgardia 49(2):12-15. DOI:10.3733/ca.v049n02p12. March 1995.
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Abstract
Existing drainage systems in many clay fields of the Imperial Valley have failed to improve soil salinity and to provide moisture conditions favorable to crop growth. In some fields, these problems are exacerbated by saline artesian water from a shallow sand aquifer. This pilot-scale field study in the Imperial Valley indicates that vertical drainage is more effective than traditional tile systems in reducing artesian water levels and the overlying clay soil moisture, and should over time also reduce the salinity of these soils. The cost of a widely spaced drainage well system appears comparable to “splitting” existing drainlines.
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