Authors
J Holden, TP Burt
Publication date
2002/6/30
Journal
Catena
Volume
48
Issue
3
Pages
163-199
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Natural pipes are common in many upland blanket peats, yet little is known about pipe network morphology or pipeflow processes. Most information on soil piping comes from the shallow peaty podzols of the Welsh uplands, where monitoring suggests that pipes may be important contributors to streamflow. This paper presents information on piping and pipeflow from a deep upland blanket peat catchment in the Pennine Hills of Northern England. Pipe outlets are found throughout the soil profile ranging from the underlying substrate at ∼3-m depth to pipes which are within a few centimetres of the surface. Mean pipe diameters range from 3 to 70 cm; some pipes are over 150 m long. Slopes in the catchment are less steep than those usually associated with soil piping. Continuous flow records were obtained from 15 gauging sites on 8 separate pipes. The pipeflow response from deep blanket peat was found to be …
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