Anthropogenic legacy effects control sediment and organic carbon storage in temperate river floodplains
Published 2020 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Anthropogenic legacy effects control sediment and organic carbon storage in temperate river floodplains
Authors
Keywords
River floodplains, Sediment storage, Soil organic carbon storage, Anthropogenic impact
Journal
CATENA
Volume 195, Issue -, Pages 104897
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Online
2020-09-21
DOI
10.1016/j.catena.2020.104897
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Geomorphology and climate interact to control organic carbon stock and age in mountain river valley bottoms
- (2020) Daniel N. Scott et al. EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
- Significant Floodplain Soil Organic Carbon Storage Along a Large High‐Latitude River and its Tributaries
- (2019) K. B. Lininger et al. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
- Elevational differences in hydrogeomorphic disturbance regime influence sediment residence times within mountain river corridors
- (2019) Nicholas A. Sutfin et al. Nature Communications
- Geomorphic controls on floodplain sediment and soil organic carbon storage in a Scottish mountain river
- (2019) Ward Swinnen et al. EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
- Geomorphic Controls on Floodplain Soil Organic Carbon in the Yukon Flats, Interior Alaska, From Reach to River Basin Scales
- (2018) K. B. Lininger et al. WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
- The degree of peatland subsidence resulting from drainage of land
- (2017) Antoni Grzywna Environmental Earth Sciences
- Mapping topsoil physical properties at European scale using the LUCAS database
- (2016) Cristiano Ballabio et al. GEODERMA
- Fluvial architecture of Belgian river systems in contrasting environments: implications for reconstructing the sedimentation history
- (2016) B. Notebaert et al. NETHERLANDS JOURNAL OF GEOSCIENCES-GEOLOGIE EN MIJNBOUW
- Bayesian Analysis of Radiocarbon Dates
- (2016) Christopher Bronk Ramsey RADIOCARBON
- Palaeohydrological reconstruction (1500–2000AD) of a drift sand landscape using pedogeomorphological and historical data (Campine area, NE Belgium)
- (2015) Koen Beerten et al. CATENA
- Banking carbon: a review of organic carbon storage and physical factors influencing retention in floodplains and riparian ecosystems
- (2015) Nicholas A. Sutfin et al. EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
- The interplay of sedimentation and carbon accretion in riparian forests
- (2014) Isaak Rieger et al. GEOMORPHOLOGY
- Late Quaternary (15 ka to present) development of a sandy landscape in the Mol area, Campine region, north-east Belgium
- (2014) K. BEERTEN et al. JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
- Non-uniform and diachronous Holocene floodplain evolution: a case study from the Dijle catchment, Belgium
- (2014) NILS BROOTHAERTS et al. JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
- Reconstruction and semi-quantification of human impact in the Dijle catchment, central Belgium: a palynological and statistical approach
- (2014) Nils Broothaerts et al. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
- Floodplain biogeochemical mosaics: A multidimensional view of alluvial soils
- (2014) Alison P. Appling et al. Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences
- Carbon burial in soil sediments from Holocene agricultural erosion, Central Europe
- (2013) Thomas Hoffmann et al. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
- Sensitivity of floodplain geoecology to human impact: A Holocene perspective for the headwaters of the Dijle catchment, central Belgium
- (2013) Nils Broothaerts et al. HOLOCENE
- Impact of the spatial and thematic resolution of Holocene anthropogenic land-cover scenarios on modeled soil erosion and sediment delivery rates
- (2013) Hanne De Brue et al. HOLOCENE
- Anthropogenic perturbation of the carbon fluxes from land to ocean
- (2013) Pierre Regnier et al. Nature Geoscience
- IntCal13 and Marine13 Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curves 0–50,000 Years cal BP
- (2013) Paula J Reimer et al. RADIOCARBON
- Development and application of multi-proxy indices of land use change for riparian soils in southern New England, USA
- (2012) M. C. Ricker et al. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
- Legacy of human-induced C erosion and burial on soil-atmosphere C exchange
- (2012) K. Van Oost et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Mechanisms of carbon storage in mountainous headwater rivers
- (2012) Ellen Wohl et al. Nature Communications
- Riverine coupling of biogeochemical cycles between land, oceans, and atmosphere
- (2011) Anthony K Aufdenkampe et al. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
- Budgeting soil erosion from floodplain sediments of the central Rhenish Slate Mountains (Westerwald), Germany
- (2011) Christian Stolz HOLOCENE
- Changing hillslope and fluvial Holocene sediment dynamics in a Belgian loess catchment
- (2011) Bastiaan Notebaert et al. JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
- Quantification of alluvial sediment storage in contrasting environments: Methodology and error estimation
- (2010) Bastiaan Notebaert et al. CATENA
- Modeling the sensitivity of sediment and water runoff dynamics to Holocene climate and land use changes at the catchment scale
- (2010) Bastiaan Notebaert et al. GEOMORPHOLOGY
- Carbon stocks of soil and vegetation on Danubian floodplains
- (2010) Arne Cierjacks et al. JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE
- A carbon storage perspective on alluvial sediment storage in the Rhine catchment
- (2009) Thomas Hoffmann et al. GEOMORPHOLOGY
- Rapid carbon accretion and organic matter pool stabilization in riverine floodplain soils
- (2009) Franz Zehetner et al. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
- Establishing a Holocene sediment budget for the river Dijle
- (2008) Bastiaan Notebaert et al. CATENA
- Natural Streams and the Legacy of Water-Powered Mills
- (2008) R. C. Walter et al. SCIENCE
- Human and climate impact on catchment development during the Holocene — Geul River, the Netherlands
- (2007) J.J.W. de Moor et al. GEOMORPHOLOGY
Find Funding. Review Successful Grants.
Explore over 25,000 new funding opportunities and over 6,000,000 successful grants.
ExploreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started