1994
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj1994.03615995005800040026x
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Sodium‐Affected Soil Identification in South‐Central Illinois by Electromagnetic Induction

Abstract: The irregular shape, small size, and spotty occurrence of sodium‐affected soils (NaAS) in moderately thick to thin loess over Illinoian till have continued to slow mapping in south‐central Illinois. Use of a Geonics EM‐38 ground conductivity meter to recognize soils with natric horizons in Tennessee suggested that this device would be useful in Illinois. We selected eight areas of NaAS in five counties of south‐central Illinois to find if the EM‐38 would be useful for predicting exchangeable sodium percentage … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
25
0

Year Published

1997
1997
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
6
2

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 32 publications
(25 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
0
25
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Electromagnetic techniques have been well noted for mapping of salt-affected soils [60]. Salts of Na can be an important contributor to salinity in southern and central Illinois and electromagnetic induction techniques have been widely used in mapping these salt affected soils [61][62][63][64] and a moderate to strong correlation was observed at our research site.…”
Section: Correlation Of Eca With Soil Properties At Three Topographicmentioning
confidence: 76%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Electromagnetic techniques have been well noted for mapping of salt-affected soils [60]. Salts of Na can be an important contributor to salinity in southern and central Illinois and electromagnetic induction techniques have been widely used in mapping these salt affected soils [61][62][63][64] and a moderate to strong correlation was observed at our research site.…”
Section: Correlation Of Eca With Soil Properties At Three Topographicmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Splitting data on soil topographic position results in changing correlation among datasets. This can be explained by the change in spatial resolution of the data set where modifiable areal unit problem (MUAP) can occur [63,65,66]. Modeling Mehlich-3 P data splitting on basis of topographic positions can improve correlation and spatial interpolation while reducing cross validation RMSE.…”
Section: Spatial Interpolation Of Selected Soil Properties and Ecamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The aforementioned relationships have been used to map saline-and sodic-soils (Ammons et al, 1989;Doolittle et al, 2001;Ganjegunte and Braun, 2011;Heilig et al, 2011;Lesch et al, 1992;Nettleton et al, 1994;Thomas et al, 2009) and recharge and discharge areas (Hopkins and Richardson, 1999;Sherlock and McDonnell, 2003;Williams and Arunin, 1990). Fig.…”
Section: Subsurface Water Movement and Soluble Saltsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although electromagnetic induction has been used to map a variety of soil properties and soil types (e.g., deJong et al, 1979;Williams & Hoey, 1987;Kachanoski et al, 1988;McBride et al, 1990;Slavich & Petterson, 1990;Diaz & Herrero, 1992;Doolittle et al, 1994;Nettleton et al, 1994;Lesch et al, 1995aLesch et al, , 1995bSheets & Hendrickx, 1995;Kitchen et al, 1996), the study described here is the first to address the utility of this tech- Figure 6. Scatterplot of actual soil depth versus soil depth predicted by apparent conductivity measured with the EM38 in the horizontal dipole orientation (n = 15).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Electromagnetic induction has been most extensively used to detect, map, and monitor soil salinity (deJong et al, 1979;Rhoades & Corwin, 1981;Williams & Baker, 1982;Corwin & Rhoades, 1982, 1990Wollenhaumpt et al, 1986;Rhoades et al, 1990;Slavich, 1990;Slavich & Petterson, 1990;Cook & Walker, 1992;Diaz & Herrero, 1992;Lesen et al, 1993;Cannon et al, 1994;Lesen et al, 1995aLesen et al, , 1995b. It has also been used to map soil water content (Kachanoski et al, 1988;Sheets & Hendrickx, 1995), sodic soils (Ammons et al, 1989;Nettleton et al, 1994), depth to claypans (Sudduth & Kitchen, 1993;Doolittle et al, 1994), salt and clay content (Williams & Hoey, 1987), presence of and depth to clay lamellae, buried soils, and water Downloaded by [University of New Mexico] at 18:34 13 October 2014 tables (Doolittle et al, 1996), forest soil properties important to biomass production (McBride et al, 1990), and depth of sand deposited from floodwaters (Kitchen et al, 1996).…”
Section: Please Scroll Down For Articlementioning
confidence: 99%