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Assessing soil remobilisation in catchments using a 137 Cs-sediment hillslope model

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posted on 2024-11-14, 15:25 authored by Ava D Simms, Colin WoodroffeColin Woodroffe, Brian JonesBrian Jones, Henk Heijnis, Jennifer Harrison, Rob Mann
Soil redistribution studies are important, especially in water supply catchments, because the rate at which denudation is occurring has implications for offsite water quality. However, the extent to which soil is redistributed within the landscape can be difficult to determine. This challenge can be overcome using fallout caesium-137 (137Cs). This paper describes the rates of soil loss and remobilisation in two sub-catchments within the Sydney Basin region, namely Kembla and Kentish Creeks, which drain to the Cordeaux reservoir. The total inventories of 137Cs in catchment soils were determined, a 137Cs-regression equation and a theoretical diffusion and migration model were used to established relationships between 137Cs inventories and the rates of soil loss. These relationships revealed relatively low occurrence of soil loss in Kentish Creek, but two slopes in the Kembla Creek sub-catchment had losses that appear to be moderate. However, there was no clear evidence to suggest whether slopes in upper and lower reaches of catchments had specific patterns of soil remobilisation. Qualitative categorisation of the slope elements using a 137Cs-sediment hillslope model can be a useful sentinel for land users and decision makers even if absolute rates of soil loss or gain are not certain. The findings suggest that sediments mobilised in the study sub-catchments are not likely to impact significantly on the water quality in the Cordeaux reservoir.

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Citation

Simms, A. D., Woodroffe, C. D., Jones, B. G., Heijnis, H., Harrison, J. & Mann, R. (2008). Assessing soil remobilisation in catchments using a 137 Cs-sediment hillslope model. Australian Geographer, 39 (4), 445-465.

Journal title

Australian Geographer

Volume

39

Issue

4

Pagination

445-465

Language

English

RIS ID

24678

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