Soils: genesis and geomorphology
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY
Cambridge Univ. Press
2015
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Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Cover Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | XX, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9781107016934 |
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100 | 1 | |a Schaetzl, Randall J. |d 1957- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)1074710975 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Soils |b genesis and geomorphology |c Randall J. Schaetzl and Michael L. Thompson |
250 | |a 2. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY |b Cambridge Univ. Press |c 2015 | |
300 | |a XX, 778 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Preface page xvii
A cknowle dgments xix
Part I The Building Blocks of Soil I
1 Introduction....................................................3
Pioneers of Soil Science, Soil Survey, and Soil Geography........3
Tilings We Hold Self-Evident.....................................6
The Framework for This Book......................................7
2 Basic Concepts: Soil Morphology.................................8
What Is Soil?....................................................8
Soil Profile Descriptions........................................8
Texture..........................................................9
Landscapes: The Exciting Additional Detail, Insight, and
Interpretation Provided by Laser Diffraction Data...............13
Color...........................................................15
The Munsell Color System......................................16
Origins of Soil Color.........................................17
Redoximorphic Features..........................................18
Landscapes: A Typical Soil Profile Description..................18
Pores, Voids, and Bulk Density .................................18
Structure.......................................................19
Consistence.....................................................22
Presentation of Soil Profile Data...............................22
Soil Micromorphology............................................22
Tools Used to Study Soil Micro morphology.......................24
3 Basic Concepts: Soil Horizonatioix ... the Alphabet
of Soils........................................................29
Soil Horizons...................................................29
Types of Soil Horizons..........................................29
O Horizons....................................................34
Types and Subdivisions of 0 Horizons........................35
Biological Degradation of Raw fitter in 0 Horizons..........36
A Horizons....................................................38
E Horizons....................................................39
B Horizons....................................................39
The Sequum Concept............................................40
The Solum Concept............................................ 40
C Horizons....................................................40
Buried Soils....................................................42
Regolith, Residuum, Saprohte, and the Weathering Profile........42
D Horizons.................................................. 45
Soil Profiles and Soil Individuals..............................45
rThe Material and the Conceptual..............................46
Concepts in Soil Classification...............................47
Putting the Letters Together....................................49
4 Basic Concepts: Soil Mineralogy................................50
Bonding and Crystal Structures..................................50
| CONTENTS
j_________
Oxides..................................................................50
Aluminum Oxides......................................................51
ïron Oxides..........................................................52
Manganèse Oxides.....................................................54
Chlorides, Carbonates, Sulfates, Sulfides, and Phosphates...............55
Silicates............................................................. 55
Nesosiîicates, Sorosilicates, and Cyclosilicates.....................56
Inosilicates (Chain Silicates).......................................56
Tectosilicates (Framework Silicates).................................58
Phylïosilicates (Layer Silicates)....................................58
1;1 Layer Silicates: Kaolin Group..................................59
1:1 Layer Silicates: Serpentine Group..............................62
OverView of 2:1 Layer Silicates....................................62
2:1 Layer Silicates: Talc-Pyrophyïlite Group.......................62
2:1 Layer Silicates: Mica Group....................................62
2:1 Layer Silicates: Vermiculite...................................63
2:1 Layer Silicates: Smectite Group................................63
2:1 Layer Silicates: Chlorite and Hydroxy-Interlayered Clays.......65
Identification of Phylïosilicates in Soils by X-Ray Diffraction.........66
XRD Theory...........................................................66
Landscapes: Geophagy....................................................66
CXay Minerai Identification Strategies Using XRD.....................68
Identification of Iron and Aluminum Oxides in Soils.....................69
5 Basic Concepts: Soil Chemistry.........................................71
The Liquid Phase in Soils...............................................71
Acids and Bases in Soils................................................71
Acids and Bases......................................................71
Soil pH............................................................ 72
Degree of Dissociation...............................................72
CarbonicAcid.........................................................73
Soluble Organic Acids................................................74
Hydrolysis of Metals.................................................74
Bases and Aïkalinity.................................................74
Complexation Reactions..................................................75
Metal-Ligand Complexes............................................. 75
Chélation............................................................75
Sorption of Solution Species............................................76
Charged Solid Surfaces..................................................76
Constant, pH-independent Charges.....................................76
Variable, pH-Dependent Charges.......................................77
pH-Dependent Charges at Silicate Edges.............................77
pH-Dependent Charges on Oxide Surfaces.............................77
pH-Dependent Charges in Soil Organic Matter........................78
Cation Exchange Capacity ofSoïl......................................79
Cation Exchange Reactions............................................80
Anton Exchange Reactions.............................................82
Adsorption Reactions....................................................82
Minerai Précipitation Reactions.........................................84
6 Basic Concepts: Soil Physics..........................................85
Soil Water Rétention and Energy.........................................85
Soil Water Movement.....................................................88
Soil Température........................................................90
Heat Fïow in Soil....................................................91
Soil Gas Composition and Transport......................................92
7 Basic Concepts: Soil Organisms...............................95
Primary Producers.............................................95
Bacteria......................................................97
Fungi.........................................................99
Soil Fauna...................................................101
Protozoa...................................................102
Nematodes..................................................102
Arthropods.................................................102
Landscapes: Termite-Generated Fairy Circles..................103
Earthworms.................................................104
Landscapes: Invading versus Migrating Worms..................105
Mammals, Birds, Reptiles, and Amphibians.....................107
Part II Soil Genesis: From Parent Material to Soil 109
8 Soil Classification and Mapping...............................Ill
Soil Geography, Mapping, and Classification.....................Ill
The System of Soil Taxonomy.....................................112
A Historical Overview.........................................113
How Soil Taxonomy Works.......................................118
Soil Moisture Regimes.........................................128
Soil Temperature Regimes......................................140
An Overview and Assessment of Soil Taxonomy...................142
The Canadian System of Soil Classification......................144
The World Reference Base for Soil Resources.....................144
Soil Mapping and Soil Maps......................................146
Utility of Soil Maps..........................................146
Components of Soil Maps.......................................148
Types of Map Units............................................149
Making a Soil Map: Fieldwork..................................151
Making a Soil Map: After the Field............................156
Error, Uncertainty, and Variability in Soil Maps..............156
Digital Soil Maps and Mapping.................................157
Landscapes: Digital Soil Mapping (DSM)..........................158
Pedometrics.....................................................159
Soil Landscape Analysis.........................................160
Describing Soil Bodies and Soil Landscapes....................161
9 Weathering....................................................165
Physical Weathering.............................................166
Forms of Physical Weathering..................................166
Chemical and Biotic Weathering..................................172
Mineral Solubility in Water...................................172
Destabilization by Charge Imbalance...........................173
Preventing the Backward Reaction..............................175
Biological Agents.............................................175
Products of Weathering..........................................176
Controls on Physical and Chemical Weathering....................176
Weathering versus Soil Production...............................178
Assessing Weathering Intensity..................................180
10 Soil Parent Materials.........................................181
Effects of Parent Material on Soils.............................181
The Mutability of Timezero......................................182
Types of Parent Materials and Their Characteristics.............183
CONTENTS
Residual Parent Materials............................................183
Saprolite.........................................................184
Saprolite Formation in the Humid Tropics..........................186
Effects of Rock Type on Residuum Character........................189
Residuum from Siliceous Crystalline Rocks.........................190
Residuum from Base-Rich Crystalline Rocks....................... 190
Residuum from Sedimentary Rocks...................................194
landscapes: The Mesa-and-Butte Desert Landscape
of the Colorado Plateau................................................194
Landscapes: Terra Rossa Soils of the Mediterranean Region..............196
Organic Parent Materials.............................................198
Transported Parent Materials.........................................199
Transported by Water..............................................199
Transported by Wind...............................................202
Eolmn Sand Parent Materials.....................................203
Parna Parent Materials..........................................206
Loess Parent Materials..........................................206
Volcanic Parent Materials: Andisols.............................216
Transported by Ice................................................218
Transported by Meltwater..........................................219
Transported by Gravity............................................219
Lithologic Discontinuities in Soils....................................222
Types of Discontinuities.............................................224
Detection of Discontinuities.........................................224
Pedogenic Importance of Discontinuities..............................230
11 Pedoturbation.........................................................232
Expressions of Pedoturbation...........................................232
Proisotropic versus Proanisotropic Pedoturbation.......................232
Biomantles and Stone Lines.............................................236
Pedoturbation Vectors..................................................238
Aeroturbation........................................................238
Aquaturbation........................................................238
Bioturbation: Faunalturbation and Floralturbation....................238
Faunalturbation......................................................239
Landscapes: Rapid Soil Changes Due to Invasive Earthworms-------------241
Mounders and Nonmounders..........................................242
Earthworms........................................................243
Arthropods........................................................244
Landscapes: Worm Bioturbation of Artifacts on the Hillslopes
of Western Illinois....................................................246
Termites..........................................................247
Landscapes: The Mima Mound Mystery - Solved! ..........................247
Floralturbation......................................................252
Cryoturbation and Geltsols...........................................254
Soil Freezing and Cryoturbation...................................255
Permafrost........................................................257
Patterned Ground..................................................257
Landscapes: The Boreal Forest of Interior Alaska.......................261
Models of Cryoturbation...........................................261
Pedogenesis Dominated by Cryoturbation............................263
Soils of Polar Landscapes.........................................267
Argilliturbation and Vertisols.......................................269
Pedogenesis Dominated by Argilliturbation.........................269
Landscapes: The Blackland and Grand Prairies of East Texas_________270
Gilgai..........................................................272
Slickensides....................................................272
Models of Argilliturbation......................................273
Rates of Argilliturbation.......................................277
Argilliturbation and Coarse Fragments...........................278
Graviturbation....................................................278
Anthroturbation...................................................279
Bombturbation.....................................................280
Less-Studied Forms ofPedoturbation................................281
12 Models and Concepts of Soil Formation.............................283
Dokuchaev and Jenny: Functional-Factorial Models....................284
Factors of Soil Formation.........................................285
The Time Factor.................................................288
The Parent Material Factor......................................288
The Topography (Relief) Factor..................................289
The Biotic Factor...............................................291
The Climate Factor..............................................292
Zonation of Soils in Alpine Regions: Where Climo-,
Topo-, and Biosequences Meet......................................293
Humans as a Soil-Forming Factor: Anthrosols.......................297
Simonson’s Process-Systems Model....................................300
Runge’s Energy Model................................................302
Johnson’s Soil Thickness Model......................................304
Johnson and Watson-Stegner’s Soil Evolution Model...................304
The Normal Soil Concept...........................................304
Background and Development of the Soil Evolution Model............306
Changes in Pedogenic Pathways: How and Why?.......................309
Thresholds and Feedbacks........................................311
Landscapes: Pedogenic Thresholds in the Buckskin Range,
Nevada..............................................................313
Steady State Conditions...........................................315
Polygenesis and Polygenetic Soils.................................316
Phillips’s Deterministic Chaos and Uncertainty Concepts............318
Final Words.........................................................319
13 Soil Genesis and Profile Differentiation..........................321
Landscapes: Can a Soil Become Extinct?..............................321
Pedogenenic Processes...............................................321
Eluviation-Illuviation..............................................322
Effect of Surface Area............................................327
Processes Associated with Soil Organic Matter.......................328
Histosols.........................................................330
Melanization: Mollisols.............................................332
Landscapes: Soils, Carbon Sequestration, and
Global Climate Change...............................................332
Formation of Granular Structure...................................333
Biocycling and Acidification........................................333
Leaching and Leucinization..........................................336
Lessivage: Alfisols and Ultisols....................................337
Landscapes: Early Views on Pedogenesis of Clay-Rich B
Horizons............................................................338
How Lessivage Works...............................................340
CONTENTS
Lamellae...............................................................344
Degradation ofArgillic Horizons........................................346
Fragipans................................................................349
Characteristics........................................................349
Genesis and Evolution..................................................350
Degradation............................................................354
Oxidation-Reduction and Gleization.......................................356
Ferrolysis...............................................................358
Landscapes: Pathways to Planosols........................................360
Rubification.............................................................362
Pedogenesis in the Humid Tropics: Oxisols................................363
Laterization and Latosolization......................................368
Desilication.........................................................371
Laterite and Plinthite...............................................372
Landscapes: The Three Phases of Warm-Climate Pedogenesis...............374
Pedogenesis in Dry Climates: Aridisols...................................375
Aridisols..............................................................377
Calcification..........................................................377
Calcification: The Process.............................................378
Sources of Carbonate...................................................381
Landscapes: Southern Arizona Basin and Range.............................382
Physicochemical Models of Carbonate Accumulation.......................385
The Desert Project Model............................................ . 385
Other Physicochemical Models.........................................390
Biogenic Models of Carbonate Accumulation..............................391
Gypsification..........................................................393
Silicification.........................................................395
Duripans.............................................................396
Silirijkation: The Process...........................................396
Salinization...........................................................398
Saline (Salty) Soils.................................................399
Sodic (Natric) Soils.................................................403
Landscapes with Sodic Soils..........................................406
Near-Surface Processes in Desert Soils.................................409
Vesicular Horizons...................................................410
Desert Pavement......................................................411
Biocrusts............................................................415
Rock Varnish.........................................................416
Podzolization: Spodosols.................................................419
The Spodosol Profile................................................. 421
Placic Horizons......................................................422
Ortstein.............................................................423
Podzolization: the Process.............................................423
Proto-imogolite Model................................................423
Chelate-Complex Model................................................424
Pros, Cons, and Contemplations of the Models.........................426
Determining the Details of the Podzolization Process.................427
Factors Affecting Podzolization......................................429
Braunification versus Podzolization....................................431
Landscapes: The Pygmy Forest Podzol Ecosystem............................432
Rates of Podzolization...............................................432
Sulfidization and Sulfuricization........................................433
Surface Additions and Losses.............................................435
Cumulization and Burial at Soil Surfaces...............................436
Mass Balance Analysis of Pedogenesis.....................................437
Part III Soil Geomorphology 443
14 Soil Geomorphology and Hydrology...................................445
Introduction to Soil Geomorphology...................................445
Historical Background..............................................445
Topical Areas of Focus.............................................446
Geomorphic Surfaces..................................................446
Types and Categories of Geomorphic Surfaces........................447
The K Cycle Concept.............................................449
Ages and Relative Dating of Geomorphic Surfaces.................450
Surface Morphometry..................................................451
The Catena Concept...................................................452
Reasons for Soil Variation within Catenas..........................453
Debris flux: Texture Contrast Soils.............................455
Moisture Flux and Soil Hydrology................................460
Slope Description and Catenas......................................461
Slope Gradient..................................................461
Slope Length....................................................462
Slope Aspect....................................................463
Landscapes: The Palouse Hills, Washington State......................466
Slope Curvature or Shape........................................467
Elevation.......................................................468
Slope Elements..................................................468
Summit Positions..............................................470
Landscapes: The Illinoian Till Plain of Southern Illinois............470
Shouldек and Fret. Fact Positions.............................471
Backsioi’t: Positions.........................................471
Fmswn Positions...............................................472
Tots core Positions...........................................472
The Nine-Unit Landsurface Model....................................474
Soil Wetness and Hydric Soils........................................477
Landscapes: The Pocosins of North Carolina...........................478
Conditions of Saturation in Soils..................................479
Natural Drainage Classes........................................481
Morphologic Expressions o/Wetness in Soils.........................481
Soil Color Patterns versus Soil Hydrology.......................483
Fully Oxidizing Conditions....................................484
Fully Reducing Conditions.....................................484
Fluctuating Water Table.......................................484
Types of Redoximorphic Features.................................485
Landscapes: The Edge Effect..........................................488
Quantification of Wetness..........................................489
Microrelief..........................................................490
Examples of Catenas..................................................493
Wisconsin Till Plain, Iowa.........................................493
Negev Desert, Israel...............................................494
Front Range, Colorado..............................................496
Coastal Plain, Israel..............................................496
The Humid Tropics..................................................498
The Geologic Timescale and Quaternary Paleoclimates..................500
The Deep Sea Record................................................503
Ruhe’s Work in Iowa..................................................504
The Stratigraphy and Constructional Surfaces of Southern Iowa......504
The Erosional Surfaces and Landscape Evolution of Southern Iowa .... 508
The Iowan Erosion Surface..........................................511
Stone Lines and Erosion Surfaces...................................514
CONTENTS
xiv
Other Theories of Stone Line Development..........................515
Dynamic Denudation..................................................517
Biomechanical Soil Processes......................................517
Elements of Dynamic Denudation....................................517
Horizon Nomenclature within the Constraints of
Dynamic Denudation................................................519
Soil Geomorphic Applications in Geoarchaeology......................521
Geoarchaeology: Inferring Past Human Behaviors from the
Physical Landscape................................................522
How Soils Can Help................................................522
15 Soil Development and Surface Exposure Dating.......................526
Basic Principles and Concepts.......................................526
Numerical Dating....................................................526
Relative Dating.....................................................528
Surface Exposure Dating.............................................529
Geomorphology and Stratigraphy....................................533
Desert Pavement...................................................533
Rock Weathering...................................................534
Weathering Rinds............................................... . 537
Obsidian Hydration Dating.......................................540
Hornblende Etching..............................................541
Rock Coatings.....................................................541
Cation Ratio Dating of Rock Varnish.............................543
Lichenometry....................................................543
Dendrochronology and Dendrogeomorphology..........................546
SED Methods Based on Soil Development...............................548
individual Properties or Attributes...............................548
Weighted Soil Properties..........................................550
Indices of Soil Development.......................................553
Color indices...................................................554
Field/Morphology indices........................................555
Laboratory Indices..............................................558
Resistant/Weatherable Ratios of Primary Minerals................560
Pedogenic Mass Balance..........................................564
Landscapes: The ~500 ka Loess-Paleosol Sequence at Thebes,
Southern Illinois...................................................565
Chronosequences.....................................................568
Theoretical Considerations........................................569
Types of Chronosequences........................................570
Steady State....................................................571
Statistical Circularity.........................................572
Statistical Considerations........................................572
Numerical Dating Techniques in Soil Geomorphology...................577
Paleomagnetism....................................................577
Tephrochronology..................................................578
Radioisotopic Dating..............................................579
Radiocarbon.....................................................580
Tjjfc ORv a so Measurement...................................580
ASSUMPTIONS................................................ 585
Applica r/oxs................................................585
D. nsc Sou. Organic Mattik................................. 586
Dating Soil Carbonate........................................591
Other Cosmogenic Isotopes.......................................592
Fallout from the Atmosphere..................................593
Formation in Rocks at the Surface . . .......................595
Luminescence Dating.............................................598
CONTENTS
XV
Partial Bleaching and Crain Sensitivity.......................600
Taking a Luminescence Sample..................................601
Perspective, Opportunities, and Overview......................602
16 Soils, Paleosols, and Paleoenvironmental
Reconstruction......................................................605
Paleosols as Palimpsests............................................605
Paleosols and Paleopedology.........................................606
Paleopedology: Why Study Paleosols?...............................606
Gasses of Paleosols...............................................606
Buried Paleosols................................................607
Recognition and Alteration of Paleosols...........................608
Buried Paleosols and Quaternary Stratigraphy......................611
The Sangamon Geosol.............................................614
The Soil-Forming Interval.........................................615
Dating of Buried Paleosols........................................616
Environmental Pedosignatures Associated with Soils..................616
Horizonation and Morphology.......................................617
Organic Matter Content............................................619
flay Mineralogy...................................................620
Cutans............................................................624
Magnetic Susceptibility...........................................625
,3C in Soils and Paleosols........................................627
UC in Soil Humus................................................628
l3C in Soil Carbonate...........................................631
Opal Phytoliths...................................................633
Pollen and Macrofossils...........................................635
17 Conclusions........................................................638
The Importance of Soils.............................................638
What of the Future?.................................................639
Contemplation and Reflection........................................640
References 641
Glossary 735
Index 771
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Schaetzl, Randall J. 1957- Thompson, Michael L. 1952- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1074710975 (DE-588)107471265X |
author_facet | Schaetzl, Randall J. 1957- Thompson, Michael L. 1952- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Schaetzl, Randall J. 1957- |
author_variant | r j s rj rjs m l t ml mlt |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV042332217 |
classification_rvk | RB 10162 TI 1000 |
classification_tum | GEO 316f GEO 315f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)913446352 (DE-599)GBV796488711 |
discipline | Geowissenschaften Geologie / Paläontologie Geographie |
edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV042332217 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T01:18:39Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781107016934 |
language | English |
lccn | 2014033154 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-027768938 |
oclc_num | 913446352 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-1028 DE-20 DE-634 DE-11 DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-188 DE-824 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-1028 DE-20 DE-634 DE-11 DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-188 DE-824 |
physical | XX, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2015 |
publishDateSearch | 2015 |
publishDateSort | 2015 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Schaetzl, Randall J. 1957- Verfasser (DE-588)1074710975 aut Soils genesis and geomorphology Randall J. Schaetzl and Michael L. Thompson 2. ed. New York, NY Cambridge Univ. Press 2015 XX, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Bodenkunde (DE-588)4007379-8 gnd rswk-swf Bodenentwicklung (DE-588)4007365-8 gnd rswk-swf Bodengefüge (DE-588)4112798-5 gnd rswk-swf Geomorphologie (DE-588)4130684-3 gnd rswk-swf Bodenbildung (DE-588)4146131-9 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Bodenkunde (DE-588)4007379-8 s Bodenentwicklung (DE-588)4007365-8 s DE-604 Bodenbildung (DE-588)4146131-9 s Bodengefüge (DE-588)4112798-5 s Geomorphologie (DE-588)4130684-3 s Thompson, Michael L. 1952- Verfasser (DE-588)107471265X aut http://assets.cambridge.org/97811070/16934/cover/9781107016934.jpg Cover Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027768938&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Schaetzl, Randall J. 1957- Thompson, Michael L. 1952- Soils genesis and geomorphology Bodenkunde (DE-588)4007379-8 gnd Bodenentwicklung (DE-588)4007365-8 gnd Bodengefüge (DE-588)4112798-5 gnd Geomorphologie (DE-588)4130684-3 gnd Bodenbildung (DE-588)4146131-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4007379-8 (DE-588)4007365-8 (DE-588)4112798-5 (DE-588)4130684-3 (DE-588)4146131-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Soils genesis and geomorphology |
title_auth | Soils genesis and geomorphology |
title_exact_search | Soils genesis and geomorphology |
title_full | Soils genesis and geomorphology Randall J. Schaetzl and Michael L. Thompson |
title_fullStr | Soils genesis and geomorphology Randall J. Schaetzl and Michael L. Thompson |
title_full_unstemmed | Soils genesis and geomorphology Randall J. Schaetzl and Michael L. Thompson |
title_short | Soils |
title_sort | soils genesis and geomorphology |
title_sub | genesis and geomorphology |
topic | Bodenkunde (DE-588)4007379-8 gnd Bodenentwicklung (DE-588)4007365-8 gnd Bodengefüge (DE-588)4112798-5 gnd Geomorphologie (DE-588)4130684-3 gnd Bodenbildung (DE-588)4146131-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Bodenkunde Bodenentwicklung Bodengefüge Geomorphologie Bodenbildung Lehrbuch |
url | http://assets.cambridge.org/97811070/16934/cover/9781107016934.jpg http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027768938&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT schaetzlrandallj soilsgenesisandgeomorphology AT thompsonmichaell soilsgenesisandgeomorphology |