Scaling of field-measured soil-water properties: I. Methodology
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Concepts of similar soil and scaling are applied to investigate the spatial variability
of the field-measured soil-water properties, soil-water pressure head, hydraulic conductivity,
and soil-water diffusivity associated with unsaturated flow. The classical, analytical
aspects of scale factors as regards the invariance of the flow equations expressed
in terms of “reduced variables” are reviewed and extended by considering stochastic
aspects of random variations in soil-water properties. It is demonstrated that scaling
can best be achieved when soil-water properties are represented by a set of related
model functions.
The scale distribution is obtained from soil-water pressure head and water content
measurements for soil sampling locations 30, 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 cm below the
surface in 12 plots planted to corn. Scale factors are found to have an approximate
log-normal distribution.
Methods of computing scale factors directly from soil-water pressure head and hydraulic
conductivity measurements and indirectly from soil-water content profiles for a drainage
experiment are derived. Improved methods for estimating unsaturated hydraulic conductivity
are also presented. Stochastic behavior of flux and cumulative seepage as random functions
of the scale factors for a similar soil is described for a simple drainage experiment.