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The effect of irrigation on tile sediment transport in a headwater stream
Authors:Stone M  Krishnappan B G
Affiliation:School of Urban and Regional Planning and Department of Geography, University of Waterloo, Ont., Canada. mstone@fes.unwaterloo.ca
Abstract:A field-scale no-till corn plot (120 m x 90 m) located on a tile drained silt loam soil near Kintore, Ontario was irrigated with 2.5 cm of water over a 3 h period to examine the effects of irrigation on tile sediment transport in a headwater stream. Flow characteristics and the composition, concentration and size distribution of suspended solids were measured at the tile outlet, an upstream reference site and three sites located downstream of the tile drain. Results show that tile sediments at the study site are fine-grained (D50 approximately 5.0 microm) and consist primarily of quartz, anorthite/albite, dolomite and calcite. Sediment concentrations in tile effluent increased from 8 to 57 mg L(-1) after 1.5 h of irrigation and reached a maximum of 72 mg L(-1). The sediment yield from the tile drain for the irrigation event was 4.6 kg ha(-1). An unsteady, mobile boundary flow model (MOBED) was used to predict flow characteristics in the stream. According to the MOBED model, bed shear stress in the stream was approximately 6 N m(-2). This value is significantly greater than the critical shear stress for complete suspension of 1 N m(-2) for tile sediments as determined from laboratory experiments using a rotating circular flume. Grain size distributions of suspended solids in the stream were close to the dispersed size distribution because of the high shear stress in the receiving stream.
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