Soil and water table management effects on aluminum dynamics in an acid sulphate soil in Vietnam

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L Minh
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Seija Virtanen ◽  
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Asko Simojoki ◽  
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pp. 1543-1547 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. L. Havard ◽  
S. O. Prasher ◽  
R. B. Bonnell ◽  
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1971 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 579-590 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Enkeboll

abstract Soil and water conditions had an effect on the degree of damage to structures. Most structures were located on alluvium with a high water table. Settlements occurred in dike and causeway fill in Chimbote harbor. Severe problems to communication occurred in some areas through embankment failures and road slides.


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Mohamed Musa Hanafi Hanafi ◽  
Abd Wahid Samsuri ◽  
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...  

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Chin S. Tan ◽  
John D. Gaynor ◽  
John W. Daniel Reynolds ◽  
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Water table management systems can be designed to alleviate soil water excesses and deficits, as well as reduce nitrate leaching losses in tile discharge. With this in mind, a standard tile drainage (DR) system was compared over 8 years (1991 to 1999) to a controlled tile drainage/subirrigation (CDS) system on a low-slope (0.05 to 0.1%) Brookston clay loam soil (Typic Argiaquoll) in southwestern Ontario, Canada. In the CDS system, tile discharge was controlled to prevent excessive drainage, and water was pumped back up the tile lines (subirrigation) to replenish the crop root zone during water deficit periods. In the first phase of the study (1991 to 1994), continuous corn (Zea mays, L.) was grown with annual nitrogen (N) fertilizer inputs as per local soil test recommendations. In the second phase (1995 to 1999), a soybean (Glycine max L., Merr.)-corn rotation was used with N fertilizer added only during the two corn years. In Phase 1 when continuous corn was grown, CDS reduced total tile discharge by 26% and total nitrate loss in tile discharge by 55%, compared to DR. In addition, the 4-year flow weighted mean (FWM) nitrate concentration in tile discharge exceeded the Canadian drinking water guideline (10 mg N l–1) under DR (11.4 mg N l–1), but not under CDS (7.0 mg N l–1). In Phase 2 during the soybean-corn rotation, CDS reduced total tile discharge by 38% and total nitrate loss in tile discharge by 66%, relative to DR. The 4-year FWM nitrate concentration during Phase 2 in tile discharge was below the drinking water guideline for both DR (7.3 mg N l–1) and CDS (4.0 mg N l–1). During both phases of the experiment, the CDS treatment caused only minor increases in nitrate loss in surface runoff relative to DR. Hence CDS decreased FWM nitrate concentrations, total drainage water loss, and total nitrate loss in tile discharge relative to DR. In addition, soybean-corn rotation reduced FWM nitrate concentrations and total nitrate loss in tile discharge relative to continuous corn. CDS and crop rotations with reduced N fertilizer inputs can thus improve the quality of tile discharge water substantially.


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