nteractions between climate and soil remain ambiguous, particularly when silicate weathering and clay mineral formation and transformation rates are considered in relation to global climate changes. Recent studies suggest that climate affects weathering rates much less than previously thought. Here we show that the climate in the central European Alps has a significant, but indirect, influence on the weathering of soils through vegetation. The pattern of element leaching and mineral transformations is not only due to precipitation and temperature. Element leaching was greatest in subalpine forests near the timberline; weathering is lessened at higher and lower altitudes. Vegetation, therefore, contributes significantly to weathering process...
Over geologic timescales, chemical weathering in mountain landscapes may play an important role in r...
The role of mountains in the geological evolution of the carbon cycle has been intensively debated f...
The older forest type Quercetum–Betuletum (oak/birch; Q-type vegetation) in southern Switzerland and...
A comparison was made between two soil climosequences on north- and south-facing slopes in northern ...
Spatially discontinuous permafrost conditions frequently occur in the European Alps. How soils under...
A toposequence of Holocene soils located between 1100–2400 m asl in the Italian Alps served as the b...
Climate change and a related increase in temperature, particularly in alpine areas, force both flora...
The main aim of this study was to examine the influence of exposure and consequently climate, on the...
Investigations in Alpine soils indicate that mineral weathering is much faster in [`]young' soils (<...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
The climatic influence on soil properties is important on ophiolites: large quantities of toxic meta...
Climate changes have huge impacts on alpine ecosystems. One of the most visible effects is glacial r...
In this study we compare newly-developed chemical weathering data with previously published data fro...
Over geologic timescales, chemical weathering in mountain landscapes may play an important role in r...
The role of mountains in the geological evolution of the carbon cycle has been intensively debated f...
The older forest type Quercetum–Betuletum (oak/birch; Q-type vegetation) in southern Switzerland and...
A comparison was made between two soil climosequences on north- and south-facing slopes in northern ...
Spatially discontinuous permafrost conditions frequently occur in the European Alps. How soils under...
A toposequence of Holocene soils located between 1100–2400 m asl in the Italian Alps served as the b...
Climate change and a related increase in temperature, particularly in alpine areas, force both flora...
The main aim of this study was to examine the influence of exposure and consequently climate, on the...
Investigations in Alpine soils indicate that mineral weathering is much faster in [`]young' soils (<...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
Soil development and erosion are important and opposing processes in the evolution of high-mountaino...
The climatic influence on soil properties is important on ophiolites: large quantities of toxic meta...
Climate changes have huge impacts on alpine ecosystems. One of the most visible effects is glacial r...
In this study we compare newly-developed chemical weathering data with previously published data fro...
Over geologic timescales, chemical weathering in mountain landscapes may play an important role in r...
The role of mountains in the geological evolution of the carbon cycle has been intensively debated f...
The older forest type Quercetum–Betuletum (oak/birch; Q-type vegetation) in southern Switzerland and...