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Published online 1 May 2008
Published in J Environ Qual 37:1051-1063 (2008)
DOI: 10.2134/jeq2006.0561
© 2008 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Water Movement within the Unsaturated Zone in Four Agricultural Areas of the United States

Lawrence H. Fishera,* and Richard W. Healyb

a USGS, 160 N. Stephanie Street, Henderson, Nevada, 89074
b USGS, MS 413, Box 25046, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado, 80225. Use of trade, product, or firm names herein does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government


Figure 1
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Fig. 1. National map showing agricultural study sites.

 

Figure 2
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Fig. 2. Long-term mean and monthly and annual precipitation for 2004 for the (a) Indiana, (b) Maryland, (c) California, and (d) Washington study sites.

 

Figure 3
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Fig. 3. Water balance for the (a) Indiana, (b) Maryland, (c) California, and (d) Washington study sites including cumulative water input, evapotranspiration, recharge, drainage, and daily change in soil moisture storage.

 

Figure 4
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Fig. 4. Daily precipitation, irrigation, soil volumetric moisture content, and groundwater elevation for the Indiana, Maryland, California, and Washington intensive unsaturated zone study sites. Also shown are the depths below land surface for each water content reflectometer used to monitor volumetric moisture content and the elevations of the land surface above the 1988 National Geodetic Vertical Datum.

 

Figure 5
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Fig. 5. Seasonal distribution of (a) total water input, and (b) total recharge for each study site.

 

Figure 6
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Fig. 6. Profiles of total hydraulic head with depth in the unsaturated zone for (a) the California study site during a period of no irrigation after the last growing season irrigation event in mid-August and (b) the Washington study site before irrigation (7 June 2004) and after the first irrigation event on 8 June 2004.

 

Figure 7
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Fig. 7. Time series of the concentration of bromide at different depths in the unsaturated zone at the (a) Indiana, (b) Maryland, (c) California, and (d) Washington study sites.

 





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