skb505
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 29, 2005
- 5
Does anyone have experience dealing with a perched water table?
Situtation: Low lying area which is typically "dry". After significant storm events(several inches of rain), the depression fills with runoff. The runoff is retained for extensive periods of time (weeks to a couple of months).
With no positive outfall and a permitting nightmare to construct one, I'm looking for a way to increase percolation and decrease the time until the depression returns to a normal state.
I'm thinking their is a confining layer that significantly slows the percolation. What would be the drawback to punching several "holes" through the confining layer to more quickly draining soils?
Situtation: Low lying area which is typically "dry". After significant storm events(several inches of rain), the depression fills with runoff. The runoff is retained for extensive periods of time (weeks to a couple of months).
With no positive outfall and a permitting nightmare to construct one, I'm looking for a way to increase percolation and decrease the time until the depression returns to a normal state.
I'm thinking their is a confining layer that significantly slows the percolation. What would be the drawback to punching several "holes" through the confining layer to more quickly draining soils?