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Hydrologic soil study of an alpine watershed

Date

1969

Authors

Dourojeanni, Axel Charles, author
Meiman, James R. (James Richard), advisor
Dils, Robert E., committee member
Schumm, S. A., committee member

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

A 2.3 Km^2 (0.89 sq. mi.) alpine watershed in the Colorado Front Range is partitioned into 13 hydrologic units. This partitioning is based on generic soil type, landforms, steepness of slope, and aspect. Most of the variation in hydrologic properties is reflected in the delineation of the major soil types. Water storage in the top 1 m of soil is the major soil hydrologic property considered. Strip terraces, alluvial terraces and the concave central area are the zones with the highest water storage capacity in the watershed (average of 44 cm/m depth). The total water storage capacity of the watershed to a depth of 1 m was calculated as 6,401 x 10^2 m3 (ac-ft). Total water storage capacity in the top 1 m is inversely related to landform slope: considering all soils, the correlation coefficient is 0.84; for the podzols, 0.91. A coefficient of correlation of 0.89 exists between bulk density and detention storage capacity. Hydraulic conductivity of selected soils ranges, in the upper horizons, from 67 cm/hr in podzol and alpine meadow soils to 16 cm/hr in lithosols and alpine turf soils. Hydraulic conductivity of all four soils decreases to 2 to 3 cm/hr at 50 to 100 cm depth.

Description

Covers not scanned.
Print version deaccessioned 2021.

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Subject

Soil science
Hydrology
Watersheds

Citation

Associated Publications

Meiman, James R. Little South Poudre Watershed and Pingree Park Campus. Colorado State University, College of Forestry and Natural Resources (1971). http://hdl.handle.net/10217/70382

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