Peat is a soil consisting of semi-decomposed plant material which accumulates in situ as a result of waterlogging. The percentage of mineral matter contained within such soils can vary from as little as 2 % by weight to as much as 30 %, though even this upper limit is more an agreed convention than any strict biological threshold. Peat can be generated from a wide range of plant materials under various forms of waterlogging. The orderly nature of peat layers, which may attain depths of 40 m or more and which may have accumulated over periods as long as 100,000 years, offer much of interest to palaeobotanists and archaeologists, particularly as the processes which result in the preservation of plant material also preserve other objects, such...
Small-scale peat extraction for fuel has probably been a feature of peat-dominated landscapes for ma...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...
Peat is a naturally existing sedimentary material that is both common and unusual; its origins are d...
Peat soil is a heterogeneous mixture of decomposed plant material that has accumulated in a water-sa...
Land-use change has transformed large areas of tropical peatland into globally significant carbon so...
Peat is developed from the accumulation of plants fragments and animal’s remain that is partially d...
Contains fulltext : 148821.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Peat formation ...
This paper presents the result of palynological research of peat relicts, found in the Westerkoggepo...
Mires are ecosystems in which – under permanently water-saturated, oxygen-poor soil conditions – dea...
Globally, peatlands are regarded as important carbon stores and their conservation essential for ens...
Peatlands have been exploited since the Middle Ages for diverse uses, including fuel, animal bedding...
The coal is a caustobiolith, which originates by biochemical transformation of plant biomass and its...
Peat, the precursor of coal, is composed primarily of plant components and secondarily of inorganic ...
This work aims to clarify and describe the necessary conditions of the peat soil horizon formation. ...
Small-scale peat extraction for fuel has probably been a feature of peat-dominated landscapes for ma...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...
Peat is a naturally existing sedimentary material that is both common and unusual; its origins are d...
Peat soil is a heterogeneous mixture of decomposed plant material that has accumulated in a water-sa...
Land-use change has transformed large areas of tropical peatland into globally significant carbon so...
Peat is developed from the accumulation of plants fragments and animal’s remain that is partially d...
Contains fulltext : 148821.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Peat formation ...
This paper presents the result of palynological research of peat relicts, found in the Westerkoggepo...
Mires are ecosystems in which – under permanently water-saturated, oxygen-poor soil conditions – dea...
Globally, peatlands are regarded as important carbon stores and their conservation essential for ens...
Peatlands have been exploited since the Middle Ages for diverse uses, including fuel, animal bedding...
The coal is a caustobiolith, which originates by biochemical transformation of plant biomass and its...
Peat, the precursor of coal, is composed primarily of plant components and secondarily of inorganic ...
This work aims to clarify and describe the necessary conditions of the peat soil horizon formation. ...
Small-scale peat extraction for fuel has probably been a feature of peat-dominated landscapes for ma...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...
The humification process is one of the least understood and most intriguing aspects of humus chemist...