Soil erosion of agricultural land in Western Australia estimated by cesium-137
DJ Mcfarlane, RJ Loughran and BL Campbell
Australian Journal of Soil Research
30(4) 533 - 546
Published: 1992
Abstract
The caesium-137 technique was used to estimate net soil loss from 10 hillslopes in the agricultural area of Western Australia. The gravel fraction of the soil was found to have approximately 56% of the total 137Cs activity found on the <2 mm fraction of the soil on three slopes where it was measured. In the lower rainfall zones, 137Cs appeared not to have uniformly labelled the soils in uncleared areas, possibly due to the redistribution of rainfall in the canopy and above the soil surface, and the water repellence of some soils. A previously established calibration curve was used to calculate net soil losses from the 10 hillslopes. Potato-growing land and slopes below rock outcrops in the Wheatbelt appear to have experienced the most severe erosion since the soils were first labelled with 137Cs in the mid 1950s (19-27 t ha-1 yr-1). Hillslopes below rock outcrops had appreciably less 137Cs than those below lateritic breakaways, indicating the presence of sheet erosion.Keywords: Soils; Erosion; Agriculture; Western Australia; Cesium-137;
https://doi.org/10.1071/SR9920533
© CSIRO 1992