Articles | Volume 4, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-4-211-2016
https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-4-211-2016
Research article
 | 
04 Mar 2016
Research article |  | 04 Mar 2016

Designing a suite of measurements to understand the critical zone

Susan L. Brantley, Roman A. DiBiase, Tess A. Russo, Yuning Shi, Henry Lin, Kenneth J. Davis, Margot Kaye, Lillian Hill, Jason Kaye, David M. Eissenstat, Beth Hoagland, Ashlee L. Dere, Andrew L. Neal, Kristen M. Brubaker, and Dan K. Arthur

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Cited articles

Amundson, R.: Soil formation, in: Treatise in Geochemistry: Surface and Ground Water, Weathering, and Soils, edited by: Drever, J. I., Elsevier Pergamon, Amsterdam, 1–35, 2004.
Anderson, S. P., Dietrich, W. E., and Brimhall, G. H.: Weathering profiles, mass balance analysis, and rates of solute loss: linkages between weathering and erosion in a small, steep catchment, Geol. Soc. Am. Bull., 114, 1143–1158, 2002.
Bao, C., Li, L., Shi, Y., Sullivan, P. L., Duffy, C. J., and Brantley, S. L.: RT-Flux-PIHM: a hydrogeochemical model at the watershed scale, Water Resour. Res., submitted, 2016.
Berg, T. M., Edmunds, W. E., Geyer, A. R., and others: Geologic map of Pennsylvania, 2nd edn., Pennsylvania Geological Survey, 4th ser., Map 1, 3 sheets, scale 1 : 250,000, 1980.
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Short summary
In order to better understand and forecast the evolution of the environment from the top of the vegetation canopy down to bedrock, numerous types of intensive measurements have been made over several years in a small watershed. The ability to expand such a study to larger areas and different environments requiring fewer measurements is essential. This study presents one possible approach to such an expansion, to collect necessary and sufficient measurements in order to forecast this evolution.