Search results for "Horizon"

showing 10 items of 600 documents

Closure to “Laboratory and Field Calibration of the Diviner 2000 Probe in Two Types of Soil” by J. Haberland, R. Gálvez, C. Kremer, and C. Carter

2015

The authors deal with the quite interesting and actual problem of Diviner 2000 capacitance probe calibration and present some field and laboratory data obtained on two different layers (0–0.26 and 0.26–0.50 cm) of the same soil profile, characterized by different textural class. The importance of site-specific calibration of sensors used to monitor soil or plant water status assumes a particular relevance in semiarid environments where the application of precision irrigation represents an appropriate management strategy aimed to achieve high values of water use efficiency (Cammalleri et al. 2013). Moreover, in clay soils, physical properties are strongly influenced by soil water content (Pr…

Soil scienceSoil typeAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Soil waterSoil horizonEnvironmental scienceField calibrationGeotechnical engineeringCapacitance probeWater-use efficiencyAir gap (plumbing)Water Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringDivinerJournal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering
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Laboratory testing of Beerkan infiltration experiments for assessing the role of soil sealing on water infiltration

2018

Abstract Soil surface sealing is a major cause of decreased infiltration rates and increased surface runoff and erosion during a rainstorm. The objective of this paper is to quantify the effect of surface sealing on infiltration for 3 layered soils with different textures for the upper layer and investigate the capability of BEST procedure to catch the formation of the seal and related consequences on water infiltration. Rainfall experiments were carried out to induce the formation of the seal. Meanwhile, Beerkan infiltration runs were carried out pouring water at different distances from the soil surface (BEST-H versus BEST-L runs, with a High and Low water pouring heights, respectively) f…

Soil sealing0208 environmental biotechnologySoil science02 engineering and technologyConductivityHydraulic conductivityComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSEarth-Surface ProcessesBeerkan infiltration experiment04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesBodemfysica en LandbeheerPE&RCSoil sealingBulk densityBEST algorithm6. Clean water020801 environmental engineeringSoil Physics and Land ManagementSaturated soil hydraulic conductivityInfiltration (hydrology)Soil water[SDE]Environmental SciencesRainfall simulation040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSoil horizon[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologySurface runoffBEST algorithms
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Soil humic acids formation and characteristics in a xeric mollisol reforested with two tree species

2002

Publisher Summary The study discussed in this chapter examines the influence on humic acids (HAs) characteristics of different plant species—Pinus halepensis Miller and Cedrus atlantica (Endl) Carriere—used in the restoration of a Mollisol under xeric conditions. The area studied is in Sicily (Italy), and two stands were compared 40 years after planting. The differences among soil profile developments in the two stands were investigated by chemical and biochemical methods to understand the different levels at which the processes of pedogenesis acted in the study area. The chapter analyzes some chemical and spectroscopic characteristics of HAs, separated from two selected pedons. The results…

Soil seriesPedogenesisAgronomyEcologySoil organic matterSoil waterSoil horizonEnvironmental scienceSoil classificationMollisolHumus
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Assessing Field and Laboratory Calibration Protocols for the Diviner 2000 Probe in a Range of Soils with Different Textures

2016

Frequency domain reflectometry (FDR) downhole sensors have been increasingly used for soil moisture field monitoring because they allow measurement, even continuously, along a soil profile. Moreover, they can also be installed with minimal soil disturbance around the access tube. The objectives of the paper were to assess the field and laboratory calibration protocols for a FDR capacitance probe (Diviner 2000) for a range of soils characterized by different particle size distributions and shrink/swell potential and to propose a practical and effective protocol on the basis of undisturbed soil samples, accounting for soil shrinkage/swelling processes characterizing swelling clay soils. The e…

Soil test0208 environmental biotechnologyShrinking/swellings soilCalibration protocolsSoil science02 engineering and technologySoil water contentCapacitance probeFrequency domain reflectometry (FDR); Capacitance probe; Soil water content; Dielectric permittivity; Shrinking/ swellings soils; Calibration protocols.Dielectric permittivityShrinking/ swellings soilsCalibrationReflectometryFrequency domain reflectometry (FDR)Water contentWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringCalibration protocol04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Swell020801 environmental engineeringSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonCapacitance probeJournal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering
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The influence of pulsed redox conditions on soil phosphorus

2010

Abstract. The effects of eleven pulsed reduction-oxidation cycles (20 and 2 days, respectively) on soil phosphorus (P) dynamics are compared for 12 soils having contrasting properties and overfertilised with respect to P. Incubation conditions simulated transient waterlogging of the soil profile and involved repeated sampling and analysis of both the solution and solid phase P forms. An initial increase in P concentration occurred upto and including the fourth full cycle was followed by a sharp decline in concentration for all but one soil. Accompanying changes in the main extractable forms of P, which appeared to be cumulative, could be summarised as a general decline in the organic P frac…

Soil testChemistryRedoxSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbaceeagriculture European Union fertilisation Olsen Ap horizonsSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiasuolo; fosforo; redox propertiesEnvironmental chemistryredox propertiesSoil waterSoil phosphorusSoil horizonPrecipitationfosforoIncubationsuoloWaterlogging (agriculture)
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Effect of soil and canopy factors on vegetation of Quercus robur woodland in the boreo-nemoral zone: A plant-trait based approach

2013

Abstract The aim of the study was to determine the effect of soil and canopy on the understory vegetation of Quercus robur stands in Latvia, located in the boreo-nemoral zone. To determine the main processes regulating formation of the plant communities, the understory vegetation of Q. robur stands was described using plant traits. Vegetation and soils were described in 24 plots representing contrasting soil types and tree species composition. Redundancy analysis was used to determine the relation between vegetation, described using plant traits (proportion of species with each trait), and soil and canopy factors. About 50% of the variation in vegetation described by plant traits was explai…

Soil textureForestryPlant communitySoil classificationUnderstoryWoodlandVegetationManagement Monitoring Policy and LawAgronomyBotanyEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonSecondary forestNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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Wildland fire ash: Production, composition and eco-hydro-geomorphic effects

2014

Abstract: Fire transforms fuels (i.e. biomass, necromass, soil organic matter) into materials with different chemical and physical properties. One of these materials is ash, which is the particulate residue remaining or deposited on the ground that consists of mineral materials and charred organic components. The quantity and characteristics of ash produced during a wildland fire depend mainly on (1) the total burned fuel (i.e. fuel load), (2) fuel type and (3) its combustion completeness. For a given fuel load and type, a higher combustion completeness will reduce the ash organic carbon content, increasing the relative mineral content, and hence reducing total mass of ash produced. The hom…

Soil texturePhysicsSoil organic matterSoil scienceSoil typeHydraulic conductivitySoil pHEnvironmental chemistryGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonWater qualitySurface runoffBiology
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Silicateins - A Novel Paradigm in Bioinorganic Chemistry: Enzymatic Synthesis of Inorganic Polymeric Silica

2013

The inorganic matrix of the siliceous skeletal elements of sponges, that is, spicules, is formed of amorphous biosilica. Until a decade ago, it remained unclear how the hard biosilica monoliths of the spicules are formed in sponges that live in a silica-poor (<50 mu m) aquatic environment. The following two discoveries caused a paradigm shift and allowed an elucidation of the processes underlying spicule formation; first the discovery that in the spicules only one major protein, silicatein, exists and second, that this protein displays a bio-catalytical, enzymatic function. These findings caused a paradigm shift, since silicatein is the first enzyme that catalyzes the formation of an inorga…

SpiculeNew horizonsPolymersNanotechnology02 engineering and technologyCatalysisCalcium Carbonate03 medical and health sciencesSponge spiculeAnimals030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesInorganic polymerChemistrySilicatesOrganic ChemistrySubstrate (chemistry)Bioinorganic chemistryGeneral ChemistryEnzymatic synthesisSilicon Dioxide021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCathepsinsPoriferaChemistry BioinorganicChemical engineeringBiocatalysisInorganic matrixSuberites0210 nano-technology
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Taxonomy of stock market indices

2000

We investigate sets of financial non-redundant and nonsynchronously recorded time series. The sets are composed by a number of stock market indices located all over the world in five continents. By properly selecting the time horizon of returns and by using a reference currency we find a meaningful taxonomy. The detection of such a taxonomy proves that interpretable information can be stored in a set of nonsynchronously recorded time series.

Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Series (mathematics)Computer scienceQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesTime horizoncomputer.software_genreStock market indexFOS: Economics and businessSet (abstract data type)CurrencyTaxonomy (general)EconometricsData miningTime seriescomputerCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsPhysical Review E
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Interactions between financial stress and economic activity for the U.S.: A time- and frequency-varying analysis using wavelets

2018

Abstract This paper examines the interactions between the main U.S. financial stress indices and several measures of economic activity in the time–frequency domain using a number of continuous cross-wavelet tools, including the usual wavelet squared coherence and phase difference as well as two new summary wavelet-based measures. The empirical results show that the relationship between financial stress and the U.S. real economy varies considerably over time and depending on the time horizon considered. A significant adverse effect of financial stress on U.S. economic activity is observed since the onset of the subprime mortgage crisis in the summer of 2007, indicating that the impact of fin…

Statistics and Probability050208 financeActuarial science05 social sciencesFinancial marketTime horizonLinkage (mechanical)Coherence (statistics)Condensed Matter Physicslaw.inventionWaveletlaw0502 economics and businessStress (linguistics)EconomicsFinancial stressEconometrics050207 economicsSubprime mortgage crisisPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
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