“…The higher the soil moisture, dissolved salt, and clay content, the shallower the detection depth of GPR. They strongly control the variation of GPR amplitude, thereby affecting the accuracy of soil layer interface identification (Butnor et al., 2014; Kumar et al., 2016; Samson et al., 2017). However, GPR has many applications in high pH soil areas, including the identification of saline or alkaline soil layers (Kumar et al., 2016; Maury & Balaji, 2015; Samson et al., 2017), boundary detection between arable land and saline–alkaline land (Wang, Li, et al., 2016), influence analysis of soil salinity on GPR images (Kumar et al., 2016; Maury & Balaji, 2015), and assessment of salinity changes in vertical profiles (Peng et al., 2009; Samson et al., 2017).…”