Increased sediment and nutrient fluxes arising after wildfires may affect downstream water quality. We use mineral magnetic tracers to elucidate linkage between different slope units, river channel and a reservoir sediment column in the gorge-dissected landscape of a burnt water supply basin. Comparison of magnetic properties of source areas with downstream (sub-aerially stored) channel deposits Suggests predominantly ridge-top origin with significant storage of sediment within footslopes. Magnetic properties of the sediment column provide insight into the nature of sediment accumulation on the reservoir floor and the role of immediate post-fire rainfall events. Comparison of source signatures with sub-aqueously stored sediment is complicat...
© 2013 Dr. Petter NymanSurface runoff and sediment availability can increase after wildfire, potenti...
Effective contemporary land management requires an understanding of how sediment transport in landsc...
Fires occur frequently over large parts of the Earth’s surface. They potentially exert a significant...
Recent work in the water supply catchments of Sydney, Australia, has explored the potential for usin...
Forest fires tend to cause accelerated soil erosion with some of the redistributed sediment entering...
Intense rainfall following wildfire can cause substantial soil and sediment redistribution. With con...
Recent work in an Australian catchment has shown that severe wildfires followed by rainstorm events ...
The sources and fluxes of sediment to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon from north-eastern Australian ri...
The sources and fluxes of sediment to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon from northeastern Australian riv...
Available online 27 August 2008. Information on post-fire sediment and nutrient redistribution is re...
This book reviews the major achievements recently made in soil erosion and sediment redistribution r...
In the summer of 2001, a combination of severe wildfires and moderate intensity rainfall events swep...
International audienceIn Northern France, land use is dominated by agriculture. Erosion by runoff re...
River bed colmation layers clog the interstices of gravel-bed rivers, impeding the vertical exchange...
Human populations have continued their unrelenting expansion into the wildland-urban interface and i...
© 2013 Dr. Petter NymanSurface runoff and sediment availability can increase after wildfire, potenti...
Effective contemporary land management requires an understanding of how sediment transport in landsc...
Fires occur frequently over large parts of the Earth’s surface. They potentially exert a significant...
Recent work in the water supply catchments of Sydney, Australia, has explored the potential for usin...
Forest fires tend to cause accelerated soil erosion with some of the redistributed sediment entering...
Intense rainfall following wildfire can cause substantial soil and sediment redistribution. With con...
Recent work in an Australian catchment has shown that severe wildfires followed by rainstorm events ...
The sources and fluxes of sediment to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon from north-eastern Australian ri...
The sources and fluxes of sediment to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon from northeastern Australian riv...
Available online 27 August 2008. Information on post-fire sediment and nutrient redistribution is re...
This book reviews the major achievements recently made in soil erosion and sediment redistribution r...
In the summer of 2001, a combination of severe wildfires and moderate intensity rainfall events swep...
International audienceIn Northern France, land use is dominated by agriculture. Erosion by runoff re...
River bed colmation layers clog the interstices of gravel-bed rivers, impeding the vertical exchange...
Human populations have continued their unrelenting expansion into the wildland-urban interface and i...
© 2013 Dr. Petter NymanSurface runoff and sediment availability can increase after wildfire, potenti...
Effective contemporary land management requires an understanding of how sediment transport in landsc...
Fires occur frequently over large parts of the Earth’s surface. They potentially exert a significant...