Results 251 to 260 of about 42,098 (295)

Geomorphology

open access: yes, 2011
Special Issue “Geomorphology and Natural Hazards in Karst Areas” della rivista Geomorphology (Elsevier)(vol. 134(1-2), 2011). http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0169555X/134/1-
Gutierrez F.   +3 more
core   +3 more sources

Glacial geomorphology: Towards a convergence of glaciology and geomorphology

Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment, 2010
This review presents a perspective on recent trends in glacial geomorphological research, which has seen an increasing engagement with investigating glaciation over larger and longer timescales facilitated by advances in remote sensing and numerical modelling.
Bingham, Robert G.   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Geomorphology

open access: yes
This geomorphology course contains lecture notes on: the history and basic concepts of geomorphology, hydrologic processes and drainage basins, streamflow, river load, fluvial landforms, karst processes and landforms, glacial processes, glacial landforms,
Karen Lemke
core   +3 more sources

Geomorphology A Textbook of Geomorphology

Nature, 1940
THE increasing use of the word ‘geomorphology’ may be regarded as symptomatic of the emancipation of the science from parental control; for as a hybrid science, the offspring of geology and geography, its early footsteps have hitherto been guided in the direction dictated by one or other of its parents, so that it was either ‘physical geography’ or ...
openaire   +1 more source

Geomorphology

2009
Geomorphology is the study of form and structure of sand dunes. Dunes are found in three types of landscapes: sea coasts and lakeshores, river valleys, and arid regions. Coastal dunes are formed along coasts in areas above the high water mark of sandy beaches. They occur in both the northern and southern hemi sphere from the Arctic and Antarctic to the
  +4 more sources

Submarine Geomorphology☆

2015
Our knowledge of submarine geomorphology has developed over the past century or more as new technologies, in particular sonar, have been developed and deployed. The resulting geophysical views have revealed a seabed that is shaped by volcanic, tectonic, and sedimentary depositional and erosional processes, as is the surface of the Earth above sea level,
openaire   +2 more sources

Geology and Geomorphology

2013
The main geological and morphological features of Italy are outlined, with the aim to examine the role of parent rocks and landforms in soil genesis and evolution. In the western and central part of the Alpine region, crystalline rocks prevail over sedimentary ones (mainly limestone and dolostone), which are widespread in the eastern part.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Specificities of Geomorphological Heritage

2018
The geomorphological heritage embraces landforms and processes play a key role in the understanding of the history of Earth, having a strict relationship with both the biological and the cultural heritage. Due to its specific characteristics – the aesthetic dimension, the dynamic dimension and the imbrication of scales – the geomorphological heritage ...
Coratza, Paola, Hoblea, Fabien
openaire   +2 more sources

Geomorphology

Arctic and Alpine Research, 1986
Nel Caine   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

GEOMORPHOLOGY

2014
Nurit Shtober-Zisu, Moshe Inbar
  +5 more sources

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