The Daly River drains a large (52500 km2) and mainly undisturbed catchment in the Australian wet-dry tropics. The basin landscapes are mantled by a thick veneer of kandosol soil which has developed under varying rates of erosion, uplift, bedrock type and climate and has been identified as being suitable for agriculture. Commencement of large scale clearing and cropping since 2002 have raised concerns about the increased loss of top soil from the land clearing and cultivation activities adjacent to the Daly River. This study was undertaken to determine the modern soil loss rates which can be used to develop a sustainable soil conservation strategy for this catchment. 239Pu, released in the 1950s and 1960s by atmospheric nuclear weapons tests...
Soil production in actively uplifting or high precipitation alpine landscapes is potentially rapid. ...
Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Floodplains comprise geomorphologically important sources an...
Soil redistribution studies are important, especially in water supply catchments, because the rate a...
The traditional Australian agricultural areas in the south are predicted to become drier, and the fr...
The technique of accelerator mass spectroscopy (AMS) has been employed to determine modern soil loss...
A survey of soil erosion was conducted in Australia using the fallout radioisotope caesium-137 as an...
An assessment of slope erosion at Tin Camp Creek catchment, Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Austral...
A study has been carried out to assess the potential of using fallout plutonium (Pu), which originat...
Soil erosion rates are quantified using the fallout radionuclide(caesium-137) approach and models (e...
The Daly River drains a large (52500 km2) and mainly undisturbed catchment in the Australian wet–dry...
The utility of the caesium-137 (137Cs) technique, for estimating the effects of wind erosion, was ev...
Soil redistribution on arable land is a major threat for a sustainable use of soil resources. The ma...
At present there is a need for the development of new radioisotopes for soil erosion and sediment tr...
Plutonium fallout from atmospheric nuclear-weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s constitutes an art...
Soil production in actively uplifting or high precipitation alpine landscapes is potentially rapid. ...
Soil production in actively uplifting or high precipitation alpine landscapes is potentially rapid. ...
Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Floodplains comprise geomorphologically important sources an...
Soil redistribution studies are important, especially in water supply catchments, because the rate a...
The traditional Australian agricultural areas in the south are predicted to become drier, and the fr...
The technique of accelerator mass spectroscopy (AMS) has been employed to determine modern soil loss...
A survey of soil erosion was conducted in Australia using the fallout radioisotope caesium-137 as an...
An assessment of slope erosion at Tin Camp Creek catchment, Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Austral...
A study has been carried out to assess the potential of using fallout plutonium (Pu), which originat...
Soil erosion rates are quantified using the fallout radionuclide(caesium-137) approach and models (e...
The Daly River drains a large (52500 km2) and mainly undisturbed catchment in the Australian wet–dry...
The utility of the caesium-137 (137Cs) technique, for estimating the effects of wind erosion, was ev...
Soil redistribution on arable land is a major threat for a sustainable use of soil resources. The ma...
At present there is a need for the development of new radioisotopes for soil erosion and sediment tr...
Plutonium fallout from atmospheric nuclear-weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s constitutes an art...
Soil production in actively uplifting or high precipitation alpine landscapes is potentially rapid. ...
Soil production in actively uplifting or high precipitation alpine landscapes is potentially rapid. ...
Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Floodplains comprise geomorphologically important sources an...
Soil redistribution studies are important, especially in water supply catchments, because the rate a...