Jemez River Basin Soil Solution Chemistry 2013 (New Mexico, USA)

Creator(s):
Chorover, Jon
Perdrial, Julia
McIntosh, Jennifer
Troch, Peter
Amistadi, Mary Kay
Losleben, Mark
Condon, Katherine
Pedron, Shawn A
Abstract:
Soil solution samples in the Jemez River Basin field sites of the Catalina-Jemez Critical Zone Observatory (CZO) are collected with two types of soil solution samples: i) Prenart Super Quartz suction cups (www.prenart.dk). Prenart suction cups are optimized for all chemistry analyses and were installed without addition of Si-slurry to allow for artifact-free Si analyses. Applied suction for each Prenart is ~ 60kPa. ii) Custom made, fiberglass wick-based passive capillary wick samplers (PCaps, Perdrial et al. 2012). PCaps are optimized for water flux determination and sampling for organic carbon, most anions and metals. PCap samples should however not be used for major cations (Na, Mg, Si, K, Ca) and dissolved inorganic carbon because of artifacts from the fiberglass materials (see Perdrial et al (2014) for a complete list). Passive suction, based on the length of the hanging water column, is ~3 kPa. Soil solution samplers were installed in each of six pedons in the Mixed Conifer Zero Order Basin (MC-ZOB) and the fire impacted site (2011 Burned ZOB) at 3 (PCaps) and 4 (Prenarts) depths, respectively. Pedon locations were selected to capture differences in catchment aspect (MC-ZOB SE facing: Pit 3 and 4, NW facing: Pit 1 and 6), landscape position (MC-ZOB: hollow Pit 2 and 5, planar Pit 1 and 6, divergent Pit 3, convergent Pit 4), elevation and burn severity (co-varying in 2011 Burned ZOB: low Pit 1 and 2, mid Pit 3, high Pit 4 to 6). All samplers are co-located with Decagon soil moisture and temperature probes. MC-ZOB was subject to a high intensity wildfire (Thompson Ridge fire) in June 2013 and was then renamed to 2013 Burned ZOB.
How to cite this dataset:
Chorover, J., Perdrial, J., McIntosh, J., Troch, P., Amistadi, M. K., Losleben, M., Condon, K., Pedron, S. A., 2018. Jemez River Basin Soil Solution Chemistry 2013 (New Mexico, USA), Version 1.0. Interdisciplinary Earth Data Alliance (IEDA). https://doi.org/10.1594/IEDA/111143. Accessed 2024-04-26.
DOI Creation Date:
2018-02-16
Related
Publication(s):
Perdrial, J.N., Perdrial, N., Harpold, A., Gao, X., LaSharr, K.M., Chorover, J. (2012) Impacts of sampling dissolved organic matter with passive capillary wicks versus aqueous soil extraction. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 76: 2019-2030, doi: 10.2136/sssaj2012.0061. Vazquez-Ortega, A., Perdrial, J., Harpold, A., Zapata-Rios, X., Rasmussen, C., McIntosh, J., Schaap, M., Pelletier, J. D., Brooks, P. D., Amistadi, M. K., and Chorover, J. (2015) Rare earth elements as reactive tracers of biogeochemical weathering in forested rhyolitic terrain. Chemical Geology, 391: 19-32, doi: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2014.10.016. Perdrial, J. N., Perdrial, N., Vazquez-Ortega, A., Porter, C., Leedy, J., and Chorover, J. (2014) Experimental Assessment of Passive Capillary Wick Sampler Suitability for Inorganic Soil Solution Constituents. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 78(2): 486-495, doi: 10.2136/sssaj2013.07.0279. Vazquez-Ortega, A., Huckle, D., Perdrial, J., Amistadi, M. K., Durcik, M., Rasmussen, C., McIntosh, J., Chorover, J. (2016) Solid-phase redistribution of rare earth elements in hillslope pedons subjected to different hydrologic fluxes. Chemical Geology, 426: 1-18, doi: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2016.01.001.
License:
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States [CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0]
Funding source(s):
National Science Foundation: 1331408
National Science Foundation: 0724958
Keyword(s):
Coverage Scope: Other
Geographic Location: Valles Caldera, Jemez River Basin, New Mexico
User Contributed Keyword(s):
Soil solution, Pore water, Soil Water, Cations, Anions, Metals, Water chemistry, pH, Electrical conductivity, Carbon, Nitrogen, Fluoride, Chloride, Nitrite, NO2, Bromide, Nitrate, NO3, Sulfate, Phosphorus, Beryllium, Boron, Sodium, Magnesium, Aluminum, Silicon, Potassium, Calcium, Titanium, Vanadium, Chromium, Manganese, Iron, Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Zinc, Arsenic, Selenium, Strontium, Yttrium, Molbydenum, Silver, Cadmium, Tin, Antimony, Barium, Lanthanum, Cerium, Praseodymium, Neodymium, Samarium, Europium, Gadolinium, Terbium, Dysprosium, Holmium, Erbium, Thulium, Ytterbium, Lutetium, Thallium, Lead, Uranium, Fluorescence, Humification index, Ultraviolet absorbance
Bounding Coordinates:
North: 35.883173     South: 35.847832     East: -106.449356     West: -106.53741
Data Available On:
2018-02-16
Resource Type:
Dataset
Download File(s)
File Name
File Size
File Checksum
1143-1_NM_SoilWater_Chemistry_2013.xls
276 KB

Related Information
IsReferencedBy:
Samples in this dataset: