Title | Investigation of water repellency and critical water content in undisturbed and reclaimed soils from the Athabasca oil sands region of Alberta Canada |
Publication Type | Thesis |
Year of Publication | 2011 |
Authors | Hunter, A. |
Pagination | 78 pages |
Date Published | 06/2011 |
Publisher | University of Saskatchewan Department of Soil Science |
Place Published | Saskatoon, SK |
Publication Language | eng |
Keywords | analytical methodology, field, soil moisture, soil properties, soil water, UofS |
Abstract | Ecosystems are disturbed to extract synthetic crude oil from the Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) in northern Alberta, Canada. Successful reclamation of mined oil sands sites depends on maximizing water storage and minimizing the potential for erosion. Soil water repellency in the AOSR affects undisturbed sites and consequently reclamation materials. Extreme water repellency may lead to low infiltration rates and hinder reclamation. There is a lack of information about the naturally occurring and pre-existing levels of soil water repellency in the AOSR. Thus, questions arise about the degree of naturally occurring water repellency and the potential for severe water repellency in reclamation soils. Studies were conducted on nine sites in the AOSR in the summers of 2008 and 2009. A range of undisturbed and reclaimed sites, as well as mineral and organic reclamation materials were examined. Five undisturbed Jack Pine stands (classified as A ecosites), four reclaimed sites and reclamation materials including mineral soil, peat and leaf and lichen covering the forest floor (LFH) were studied. For a comparison of methods, one grasslands site in central Saskatchewan was included. Mini and standard tension infiltrometers were compared as a means of measuring soil water repellency index (RI). There was strong variability in RI values between the infiltrometer methods. The mean RI values from the mini infiltrometers were higher than from the standard infiltrometer (9.61 and 3.46, respectively). The variability within sites dominated the variability in RI for the two methods. Despite these obvious trends, RI values between infiltrometer sizes were statistically different for only two individual sites. Increasing the number of sampling points in the second field season did not reduce the variability. The simpler, less expensive mini infiltrometer is as effective as the standard infiltrometer in measuring soil water repellency. This will enable more efficient and extensive monitoring of soil water repellency in reclaimed and undisturbed sites in the AOSR. |
URL | http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-07072011-112233/unrestricted/HunterMSCThesis.pdf |
Locational Keywords | Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) |
Active Link | |
Group | OSEMB |
Citation Key | 52708 |