Land subsidence is a major threat for the livability of deltas worldwide. Mitigation of the negative impacts of subsidence, like increasing flooding risk, requires an assessment of the potential of the deltas’ subsurfaces for subsidence. This enables the prediction of current and future subsidence and optimization of sustainable management strategies. In this paper we present a method to determine the amount of compaction within different Holocene deltaic peat sequences based on a case study from the Rhine-Meuse delta, the Netherlands, showing the potential of these sequences for subsidence due to peat compaction
Peat and gyttja (organic lake sediment) are important indicators for past environmental conditions;...
In large parts of the western coastal region of the Netherlands peat soils occur. Historic land use ...
The survival of peat meadows in the Netherlands is threatened by soil subsidence, less favourable co...
Human-induced subsidence threatens many coastal-deltaic plains, due to the amplifying effects it has...
Modern and forecasted flooding of deltas is accelerated by subsidence of Holocene deposits. Subsiden...
The low-lying part of The Netherlands is very vulnerable in terms of surface subsidence due to peat ...
An increasing number of people lives in coastal zones with a subsurface consisting of heterogenic so...
Subsidence in the Holland coastal plain of the Netherlands was reconstructed from the vertical displ...
In many deltas worldwide subsidence still is an underestimated problem, while the threat posed by la...
Land subsidence is a complicated phenomenon, relevant in the Holocene coastal-plain of the Netherlan...
The urbanised peat-rich coastal-deltaic plain of the Netherlands is severely subsiding due to human-...
Peat and gyttja (organic lake sediment) are important indicators for past environmental conditions; ...
Dutch peatlands have been subsiding due to peat decomposition, shrinkage and compression, since thei...
Dutch peatlands have been subsiding due to peat decomposition, shrinkage and compression, since thei...
In the central Netherlands, the Rhine follows a course imposed by Late Quaternary glaciation, forci...
Peat and gyttja (organic lake sediment) are important indicators for past environmental conditions;...
In large parts of the western coastal region of the Netherlands peat soils occur. Historic land use ...
The survival of peat meadows in the Netherlands is threatened by soil subsidence, less favourable co...
Human-induced subsidence threatens many coastal-deltaic plains, due to the amplifying effects it has...
Modern and forecasted flooding of deltas is accelerated by subsidence of Holocene deposits. Subsiden...
The low-lying part of The Netherlands is very vulnerable in terms of surface subsidence due to peat ...
An increasing number of people lives in coastal zones with a subsurface consisting of heterogenic so...
Subsidence in the Holland coastal plain of the Netherlands was reconstructed from the vertical displ...
In many deltas worldwide subsidence still is an underestimated problem, while the threat posed by la...
Land subsidence is a complicated phenomenon, relevant in the Holocene coastal-plain of the Netherlan...
The urbanised peat-rich coastal-deltaic plain of the Netherlands is severely subsiding due to human-...
Peat and gyttja (organic lake sediment) are important indicators for past environmental conditions; ...
Dutch peatlands have been subsiding due to peat decomposition, shrinkage and compression, since thei...
Dutch peatlands have been subsiding due to peat decomposition, shrinkage and compression, since thei...
In the central Netherlands, the Rhine follows a course imposed by Late Quaternary glaciation, forci...
Peat and gyttja (organic lake sediment) are important indicators for past environmental conditions;...
In large parts of the western coastal region of the Netherlands peat soils occur. Historic land use ...
The survival of peat meadows in the Netherlands is threatened by soil subsidence, less favourable co...