A Conterminous United States Multilayer Soil Characteristics Dataset for Regional Climate and Hydrology Modeling
Open Access
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Earth Interactions
- Vol. 2 (2) , 1-26
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1087-3562(1998)002<0001:acusms>2.3.co;2
Abstract
Soil information is now widely required by many climate and hydrology models and soil–vegetation–atmosphere transfer schemes. This paper describes the development of a multilayer soil characteristics dataset for the conterminous United States (CONUS-SOIL) that specifically addresses the need for soil physical and hydraulic property information over large areas. The State Soil Geographic Database (STATSGO) developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture–Natural Resources Conservation Service served as the starting point for CONUS-SOIL. Geographic information system and Perl computer programming language tools were used to create map coverages of soil properties including soil texture and rock fragment classes, depth-to-bedrock, bulk density, porosity, rock fragment volume, particle-size (sand, silt, and clay) fractions, available water capacity, and hydrologic soil group. Interpolation procedures for the continuous and categorical variables describing these soil properties were developed and appli... Abstract Soil information is now widely required by many climate and hydrology models and soil–vegetation–atmosphere transfer schemes. This paper describes the development of a multilayer soil characteristics dataset for the conterminous United States (CONUS-SOIL) that specifically addresses the need for soil physical and hydraulic property information over large areas. The State Soil Geographic Database (STATSGO) developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture–Natural Resources Conservation Service served as the starting point for CONUS-SOIL. Geographic information system and Perl computer programming language tools were used to create map coverages of soil properties including soil texture and rock fragment classes, depth-to-bedrock, bulk density, porosity, rock fragment volume, particle-size (sand, silt, and clay) fractions, available water capacity, and hydrologic soil group. Interpolation procedures for the continuous and categorical variables describing these soil properties were developed and appli...Keywords
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