On hillslopes the balance between soil transport and production determines local soil thickness and the age distribution of particles that comprise the soil (where age refers to the time elapsed since detachment from bedrock). The mean of this age distribution is defined as the residence time, and in a landscape with time-invariant topography (i.e., morphologic steady state), the spatial uniformity of soil production ensures that the residence time of soils is spatially invariant. Thus, given constant soil-forming factors, spatial variation of soil properties reflects differences in residence time driven by nonuniform soil production. Spatially extensive soil databases, which are often freely available in electronic form, provide a cheap an...
5 [1] Channel incision drives hillslope morphology in humid soil-mantled landscapes. 6 When channel ...
Background and Aims: Soil chronosequences on marine terraces along the Pacific Coast of California a...
Constraining the range of chemical weathering rates in soils is important because weathering can hav...
On hillslopes the balance between soil transport and production determines local soil thickness and ...
Hillslope soil residence time (average particle age making up the soil) reflects the rates of soil p...
Purpose: Three previously published datasets of high-mountain soil variation in proglacial valleys i...
AbstractThe time minerals spend in the weathering zone is crucial in determining soil biogeochemical...
Although topographic steady state is often used as a simplifying assumption in sediment yield studie...
Erosive landscapes are formed from the amalgamation of individual sediment transport over space and ...
We use a numerical dynamic soil-landscape model to study one aspect of the spatio-temporal soil-land...
Landscapes in areas of active uplift and erosion can only remain soil-mantled if the local productio...
One method of studying the effects of time on soil development is the recognition and investigation ...
Soils in pro-glacial areas are often approached from a chronosequence viewpoint. In the chronosequen...
Determining where sediment goes and why is a problem that defines the field of geomorphology and has...
Soil formation represents a suite of biogeochemical and physical processes that transform rock and s...
5 [1] Channel incision drives hillslope morphology in humid soil-mantled landscapes. 6 When channel ...
Background and Aims: Soil chronosequences on marine terraces along the Pacific Coast of California a...
Constraining the range of chemical weathering rates in soils is important because weathering can hav...
On hillslopes the balance between soil transport and production determines local soil thickness and ...
Hillslope soil residence time (average particle age making up the soil) reflects the rates of soil p...
Purpose: Three previously published datasets of high-mountain soil variation in proglacial valleys i...
AbstractThe time minerals spend in the weathering zone is crucial in determining soil biogeochemical...
Although topographic steady state is often used as a simplifying assumption in sediment yield studie...
Erosive landscapes are formed from the amalgamation of individual sediment transport over space and ...
We use a numerical dynamic soil-landscape model to study one aspect of the spatio-temporal soil-land...
Landscapes in areas of active uplift and erosion can only remain soil-mantled if the local productio...
One method of studying the effects of time on soil development is the recognition and investigation ...
Soils in pro-glacial areas are often approached from a chronosequence viewpoint. In the chronosequen...
Determining where sediment goes and why is a problem that defines the field of geomorphology and has...
Soil formation represents a suite of biogeochemical and physical processes that transform rock and s...
5 [1] Channel incision drives hillslope morphology in humid soil-mantled landscapes. 6 When channel ...
Background and Aims: Soil chronosequences on marine terraces along the Pacific Coast of California a...
Constraining the range of chemical weathering rates in soils is important because weathering can hav...