This article provides an overview of the development of soil micromorphological studies of ancient agriculture and the current position of research in this field. The stance adopted by the authors is deliberately combative, and it is hoped that the article will stimulate discussion of the current li
Distributed evaluation of the contribution of soil erosion to the sediment yield from a watershed
โ Scribed by Pilotti, Marco; Bacchi, Baldassare
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 198 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-1269
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The correct determination of the sediment yield from a basin is of paramount importance in several hydraulic and environmental applications, such as the evaluation of the storage reduction of artificial reservoirs. However, due to the highly episodic nature of sediment supply and transport in many environments and to the extreme complexity of the processes involved, the evaluation of the sediment load in a river is still highly uncertain. When the time scale of interest is sufficiently long, and when the primary sediment source comes from distributed erosion in the watershed, the problem can be tackled in an indirect fashion, by computing the contribution to the annual suspended sediment yield from soil erosion. In order to accomplish this task, we propose a distributed application of the widely used USLE formula. The formula is automatically applied along drainage networks derived from a digital elevation model and properly modified to take into account the presence of deposition zones in the watershed.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this current issue of Geoarchaeology, have assessed published literature on soil micromorphological studies of ancient agriculture. Their "combative" arguments and final assertion that soil micromorphology cannot be used to identify ancient agriculture is challenged. It is also argued that, witho
A method that combines calibration and identiยฎability analysis of a dynamic water quality model to evaluate the relative importance of various processes aecting the dynamic aspects of water composition is illustrated by a study of the response of suspended sediment and dissolved nutrients to a ยฏood