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Identifying gullies in bolin creek watershed. Christina Hurley Alyssa James Carly Buch Nicole Meyer. Introduction to Gullies. What is a Gully? Where do Gullies occur?. Flow Chart. Soils. Factors that affect soil erodibility. Particle Size Organic Matter Content
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Identifying gullies in bolin creek watershed Christina Hurley Alyssa James CarlyBuch Nicole Meyer
Introduction to Gullies • What is a Gully? • Where do Gullies occur?
Factors that affect soil erodibility • Particle Size • Organic Matter Content • Plant/vegetation and animal life • Climate • Land Management • Slope and length of slope • Precipitation
Considering other factors • Slope >10 • Loamy soils • High Runoff • Poor Drainage Class
Impervious Cover has Larger Influence than Slope Flow accumulation weighted by impervious cover Slope
Conclusions • Existing gullies were not by outlets with large watersheds, or with necessarily high stream powers • Means that it is difficult to predict where gullies will form • A larger sample size of existing gullies might yield more conclusive results • Both impervious cover and slope had a significant influence on stream power. Gullies and areas of concern are located in in places with high imperviousness and on medium slopes • Outlets with a higher stream power going into the outlet were more likely to have gullies (there or below the outlet) • Soil T-factor has strong influence on the formation of gullies
Future Considerations • In order for Orange County to prevent further gullies from forming they should continue to watch: • Present soil mass movement and rate • Parent material • Cemented, compacted or impermeable subsoil layers • Area impervious upstream • Size of watershed • Stream power • Root distribution • Vegetation type and distribution • Saturated hydraulic conductivity • Pore water pressure • Precipitation occurrence an distribution • Temperature fluctuations • Degree of weathering • Dips parallel to slopes along streams • Summarized from Brooks, 1997