Hydropedology and soil evolution in explaining the hydrological properties of recharge dams in arid zone environments

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ORIGINAL PAPER

Hydropedology and soil evolution in explaining the hydrological properties of recharge dams in arid zone environments Said Al-Saqri 1 & Ali Al-Maktoumi 2 & Said Al-Ismaily 2 & Anvar Kacimov 2 & Hamad Al-Busaidi 2

Received: 11 January 2015 / Accepted: 10 September 2015 / Published online: 12 December 2015 # Saudi Society for Geosciences 2015

Abstract The effects of anthropogenic activities on soil evolution due to siltation and the impact on hydraulic properties of the vadose zone on the augmentation of the aquifer recharge are investigated for the Al-Khoud dam in Oman. Inside the dam reservoir and in areas adjacent to the embankment, downstream, 33 pedons (of depths between 1.5 and 2 m) were excavated and studied during 2011 and 2012. Soil analysis revealed that the subsoil’s physiochemical properties of the study area are continuously changing due to damming, i.e., alteration of the natural runoff, intensified sedimentation, and infiltration. Variation of hydropedological properties caused by the geotechnical construction is evident in a distinct vertical stratification of texture of accrued sediments and almost an order of magnitude drop in saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) of the dam bed. Correspondingly, spilling of ponded water over the dam crest occurs more frequent and therefore increases the potential hazards of flooding of the

downstream recharge area. Some fine particles of the suspended load carried to the reservoir by the feeding wadi migrate vertically downward, driven by seepage, into the originally coarse matrix of the parent soil and cause clogging of large pores (with time, hard pans in the subsurface are developing) even without visible cake formation on the soil surface. Development of hard pans was also discovered in pedons at depths close to 1 m. This is attributed to presence of a pedogenic carbonate derived from the parent rock and formed by precipitation of dissolved salts due to a vertical upward moisture evaporation to a hot and dry bed surface during prevailing dry bed periods of dam operation. Ks measured downstream of the dam was relatively high (6 m/day) and was three times higher than the average value inside the reservoir (2.1 m/day), ranging there between 0.01 and 3.96 m/day, but less than at the upstream site outside the reservoir. Keywords Soil evolution . Sedimentation . Recharge dam . Infiltration . Hydraulic conductivity

* Ali Al-Maktoumi [email protected]; [email protected] Said Al-Saqri [email protected] Said Al-Ismaily [email protected] Anvar Kacimov [email protected] Hamad Al-Busaidi [email protected] 1

EcOman Centre, Petroleum Development Oman LLC, P.O. Box 81, Muscat, Muscat PC 113, Sultanate of Oman

2

College of Agricultural and Marine Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box 34, Al-Khoud, Muscat PC 123, Sultanate of Oman

Introduction In arid zones (like Oman), recharge dams are one of the effective measures to replenish groundwater systems by intercepting flash flood water for the purpose of enhancing recharge (Ministry of Reg