Landscape Evolution: Constraining the Roles of Denudation, Climate and Tectonics Over Different Time and Space Scales
Edited by K Gallagher, SJ Jones and J Wainwright
208 pages, illustrations, maps.
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The morphology of Earth's surface reflects the interaction of climate, tectonics and denudational processes operating over a wide range of spatial and
temporal scales. These processes can be considered catastrophic or continuous; depending on the timescale of observation or interest. Recent research
had required integration of historically distinct subjects such as geomorphology, sedimentology, climatology and tectonics. Together, these have
provided new insights into absolute and relative rates of denudation, and the factors that control the many dynamic processes involved. Specific
subject areas covered are sediment transport processes and the timescales of competing processes, the role of the geological record and landscapes in
constraining different processes, the nature of landscape evolution at different spatial scales and in contrasting geological environments.
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