- Capillary fringe
The capillary fringe is the subsurface layer in which
groundwater seeps up from awater table bycapillary action to fill pores. Pores at the base of the capillary fringe are filled with water due to tension saturation. This saturated portion of the capillary fringe is less than total capillary rise because of the presence of a mix in pore size. If pore size is small and relatively uniform, it is possible that soils can be completely saturated with water for several feet above the water table. Alternately, the saturated portion will extend only a fewinch es above the water table when pore size is large. Capillary action supports avadose zone above the saturated base within which water content decreases with distance above the water table. Insoil s with a wide range in pore size, the unsaturated zone can be several times thicker than the saturated zone.Some workers restrict their definition of the capillary fringe only to the tension-saturated base portion and exclude it wholly from the vadose zone. This is more common among workers addressing solute transport and water flow. Others define the capillary fringe as including both the tension-saturated and unsaturated portions. This is the preferred definition among workers dealing with the remediation of salt affected soils as well as those dealing with the vapor phase of soil processes and
bioremediation . It is not uncommon to see the capillary fringe treated as a boundary condition separating the water table from the unsaturated zone, without defining it as a significant part of either.External links
* [http://www.gwrtac.org/html/glossary.html Glossary of Hydrogeologic Terms]
* [http://wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/wat/gws/gwbc/C02_origin.html Origin, Occurrence and Movement of Ground Water]
* [http://www.earthdrx.org/poresizegwflow.html Introduction to Basic Ground-Water Flow]
* [http://toxics.usgs.gov/definitions/unsaturated_zone.html Unsaturated Zone]edotions
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.