4.5 Article

Modelling soil salinity across a gilgai landscape by inversion of EM38 and EM31 data

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 66, Issue 5, Pages 951-960

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejss.12278

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The soil in arid and semi-arid areas is often markedly saline, which can severely limit agricultural productivity. Increasingly, geophysical methods are being implemented to map the levels and areal extent of soil salinity. One of the most effective methods is electromagnetic (EM) induction with instruments designed to measure apparent soil electrical conductivity (ECa). This study describes the generation of electromagnetic conductivity images (EMCIs) by inverting ECa data obtained with the EM38 and EM31 devices along two closely-spaced transects by the EM inversion approach in the EM4Soil package. The EM38 ECa data are shown to be a more effective predictor of soil ECe. Calibration equations based on calculated true electrical conductivity (sigma) and measured electrical conductivity of a saturated soil-paste extract (ECe) provide reliable estimates of ECa. The patterns of sigma in a test of the method in soil developed over thick alluvium on a clay plain in central New South Wales, Australia, compare favourably with existing pedological mapping; the mounds and depressions of gilgai were strongly differentiated from the more sandy alluvial sediments that characterize prior stream channels. The overall approach is potentially useful for generating a single calibration equation that can be used to predict ECe at various depths in the soil. Improvements in EMCI modelling can also be sought by joint inversion of EM with other geophysical datasets.

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