Search results for "RFA"

showing 10 items of 11106 documents

Testing simple scaling in soil erosion processes at plot scale

2018

Abstract Explaining scale effects for runoff and erosion improves our understanding and simulation ability of hydrological and erosion processes. In this paper, plot scale effects on event runoff per unit area (Qe), sediment concentration (Ce) and soil loss per unit area (SLe) were checked at El Teularet-Sierra de Enguera experimental site in Eastern Spain. The measurements were carried out for 31 events occurring in the years 2005 and 2007 in bare ploughed plots ranging from 1 to 48 m2. The analysis established the scaling relationship by dimensional analysis and self-similarity theory, and tested this relationship at different temporal scales ranging from event to annual scale. The dimens…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesScale (ratio)Runoff0208 environmental biotechnologySoil scienceNatural rainfall02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesHydrology (agriculture)Settore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliTemporal scalesScaling0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesPlotsSedimentPE&RC020801 environmental engineeringScalePlotSediment concentrationSpatial ecologyErosionSoil erosionEnvironmental scienceSurface runoff
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Applying the USLE Family of Models at the Sparacia (South Italy) Experimental Site

2016

Soil erosion is a key process to understand the land degradation, and modelling of soil erosion will help to understand the process and to foresee its impacts. The applicability of the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) at event scale is affected by the fact that USLE rainfall erosivity factor does not take into account runoff explicitly. USLE-M and USLE-MM, including the effect of runoff in the event rainfall– runoff erosivity factor, are characterized by a better capacity to predict event soil loss. The specific objectives of this paper were (i) to determine the suitable parameterization of USLE, USLE-M and USLE-MM by using the dataseries of Sparacia experimental site and (ii) to evaluat…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesScale (ratio)Soil ScienceSoil scienceDevelopment01 natural sciencesDeposition (geology)Soil lossplot soil loUSLE-MMSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliEnvironmental Chemistry0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceEvent (probability theory)Hydrologysoil erosionSediment04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesUniversal Soil Loss Equation040103 agronomy & agricultureLand degradationUSLE-M0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSurface runoffEvent scaleLand Degradation & Development
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Transboundary Basins Need More Attention: Anthropogenic Impacts on Land Cover Changes in Aras River Basin, Monitoring and Prediction.

2020

Changes in land cover (LC) can alter the basin hydrology by affecting the evaporation, infiltration, and surface and subsurface flow processes, and ultimately affect river water quantity and quality. This study aimed to monitor and predict the LC composition of a major, transboundary basin contributing to the Caspian Sea, the Aras River Basin (ARB). To this end, four LC maps of ARB corresponding to the years 1984, 2000, 2010, and 2017 were generated using Landsat satellite imagery from Armenia and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic. The LC gains and losses, net changes, exchanges, and the spatial trend of changes over 33 years (1984–2017) were investigated. The most important drivers of the…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesScienceDrainage basinland change modelerLand cover010501 environmental sciencesStructural basin01 natural sciencesremote sensingHydrology (agriculture)Satellite imagerySubsurface flow0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hungergeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industryQ15. Life on land6. Clean wateranthropogenic impactsWater resourcesAras River Basin13. Climate actionAgriculturetransboundary basinGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceWater resource managementbusinessRemote sensing
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Photoreduction of gaseous oxidized mercury changes global atmospheric mercury speciation, transport and deposition

2018

9 pags, 8 figs. -- Correction autor: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28455-w http://hdl.handle.net/10261/268181

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesScienceGeneral Physics and Astronomychemistry.chemical_elementAtmospheric mercury010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciences7. Clean energyArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology14. Life underwaterlcsh:Science0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMultidisciplinaryChemistryAquatic ecosystemQPhotodissociationGeneral ChemistryMercury (element)Earth surface[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterlcsh:Q
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The Graham Bank (Sicily Channel, central Mediterranean Sea). Seafloor signatures of volcanic and tectonic controls

2018

Abstract Graham Bank is a dominant physiographic element of the NW Sicily Channel (central Mediterranean Sea), affected in the last 100 years by numerous well-documented volcanic eruptions. We present the first results of a geomorphological study where the Graham Bank region in the depth interval 7–350 m was mapped for the first time with multi-beam echosounder and high-resolution seismic and multi-channel seismic reflection profiles. We describe in high resolution the detailed geomorphological features of Graham Bank, and how the superficial expression of different process and dynamics occurring in the sub-seafloor evidence volcanic and tectonic controls on seafloor morphology across a rel…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleSeamount010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesFluid seepagePaleontologyMediterranean seaEcho soundingSlope instability14. Life underwater0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesgeographyFluid seepage; Graham Bank; Slope instability; Volcanic seamountgeography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcanic seamountFluid seepage Slope instability Volcanic seamount Graham BankGraham BankSeafloor spreadingTectonicsVolcanoSedimentary rockChannel (geography)Geology
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Occurrence, distribution, and risk assessment of pharmerciuticals in wastewater and open surface drains of peri-urban areas: Case study of Juja town,…

2020

Abstract The occurrence of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) in the environment is becoming a major area of concern due to their undesirable effects on non-target organisms. This study investigated the occurrence and risk of contamination by five antibiotics and three antiretrovirals drugs in a fast-growing peri-urban area in Kenya, with inadequate sewer system coverage. Due to poor sewage connectivity and poorly designed decentralized systems, wastewater is directly released in open drains. Water and sediment samples were collected from open surface water drains, while wastewater samples were collected from centralized wastewater treatment plants (WWTP). Solid-phase extraction and u…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSewagebusiness.industryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEnvironmental engineeringSewageSedimentGeneral Medicine010501 environmental sciencesContaminationWastewaterToxicology01 natural sciencesPollutionKenyaRisk AssessmentWastewaterTandem Mass SpectrometryEnvironmental scienceSewage treatmentEcotoxicitybusinessSurface waterEffluent0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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High-resolution 40Ar/39Ar chronostratigraphy of the post-caldera (<20 ka) volcanic activity at Pantelleria, Sicily Strait

2011

Abstract The island of Pantelleria (Sicily Strait), the type locality for pantellerite, has been the locus of major caldera-forming eruptions that culminated, ca. 50 ka ago, in the formation of the Cinque Denti caldera produced by the Green Tuff eruption. The post-caldera silicic activity since that time has been mostly confined inside the caldera and consists of smaller-energy eruptions represented by more than twenty coalescing pantelleritic centers structurally controlled by resurgence and trapdoor faulting of the caldera floor. A high-resolution 40Ar/39Ar study was conducted on key units spanning the recent (post-20 ka) intracaldera activity to better characterize the present-day status…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSilicicForcing (mathematics)010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesPaleontologyGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)CalderaChronostratigraphy[SDU.ENVI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces environmentComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciences40Ar/39Ar xenocrysts excess 40Ar anorthoclase[SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean AtmosphereHorizon (geology)geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E PetrografiaSubsidencePaleosolSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaGeophysicsVolcano13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceGeology
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The influence of the wind direction and plants on the variability of topsoil magnetic susceptibility in industrial and urban areas of southern Poland

2016

Volume magnetic susceptibility (κ) was measured on the soil surface and in the vertical topsoil profile within a 300 km2 area located in an urban-industrial conurbation. The results were compared to plant species compositions in the forest storeys, elevation above sea level, and terrain geomorphology. The content and mineral composition of the magnetic fraction were determined in the soil horizons. It was found that the extent of the area with enhanced topsoil magnetic susceptibility was similar to the dominant wind direction (south–west). Enhanced κ values were observed for the soil at the forest margin on the leeward side of the emitters as well as at sites located on exposed local elevat…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSoil ScienceSoil science010501 environmental sciencesFraxinus01 natural sciencesforest topsoil IPrevailing windsEnvironmental ChemistrySea level0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and Technologypollution distributionGlobal and Planetary ChangeTopsoilbiologytechnogenic magnetic particlesGeologyWind directionbiology.organism_classificationPollutionDeciduousLitterEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonmagnetic susceptibilityEnvironmental Earth Sciences
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Assessing and Modeling Soil Detachment Capacity by Overland Flow in Forest and Woodland of Northern Iran

2020

Land use has significant effects on the erosion process, since it influences the soil detachment capacity by causing an overland flow (Dc). The effects of different land uses on the rill detachment capacity have not been explained in depth, and the hydraulic parameters providing accurate estimates of this soil property have not been completely identified. This study quantifies Dc at low flow rates in woodland and forestland, compared to two other land uses (cropland and grassland), in the Saravan watershed (Northern Iran), and develops prediction models of Dc and rill erodibility (Kr). Dc was measured on undisturbed soil samples, collected in the four land uses, and characterized in terms o…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSoil testWater flowWoodlandvegetation cover01 natural sciencesshear stressshallow flowsoil organic matterrill erodibility0105 earth and related environmental sciencesHydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorysoil erosionSoil organic matterland useForestry04 agricultural and veterinary scienceslcsh:QK900-989RillSoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureErosionlcsh:Plant ecology0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSurface runoffForests
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2018

Abstract. Sediments containing gas hydrate dispersed in the pore space are known to show a characteristic seismic anomaly which is a high attenuation along with increasing seismic velocities. Currently, this observation cannot be fully explained albeit squirt-flow type mechanisms on the microscale have been speculated to be the cause. Recent major findings from in situ experiments, using the gas in excess and water in excess formation method, and coupled with high-resolution synchrotron-based X-ray micro-tomography, have revealed the systematic presence of thin water films between the quartz grains and the encrusting hydrate. The data obtained from these experiments underwent an image proce…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesStratigraphyAttenuationFlow (psychology)Clathrate hydratePaleontologySoil ScienceMineralogyGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesSynchrotronlaw.inventionGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologylawHydrate bearing sedimentsHydrateQuartzGeologyMicroscale chemistry0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesSolid Earth
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