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         Geomorphology:     more books (100)
  1. Chemical Sediments and Geomorphology: Precipitates and Residue in the Near-Surface Environment by Andrew S. Goudie, 1983-06
  2. Geomorphology in the Tropics: A Study of Weathering and Denuation in Low Latitudes by Michael F. Thomas, 1994-06-16
  3. Arid Zone Geomorphology: Process, Form and Change in Drylands
  4. Modern Concepts in Geomorphology by Patrick McCullagh, 1983-01-01
  5. Urban geomorphology (Special paper - Geological Society of America ; 174)
  6. Mountain Geomorphology - Integrating Earth Systems
  7. The Study of Landforms: A Textbook of Geomorphology by R. J. Small, 1978-10-31
  8. Geomorphology and River Management: Applications of the River Styles Framework by Gary Brierley, Kirstie Fryirs, 2005-02-18
  9. Introduction to Process Geomorphology by Vijay K. Sharma, 2010-04-21
  10. Field Techniques in Glaciology and Glacial Geomorphology by Bryn Hubbard, Neil F. Glasser, 2005-06-13
  11. World Geomorphology by E. M. Bridges, 1990-11-30
  12. Theoretical Geomorphology by Adrian E. Scheidegger, 1991-05
  13. Geomorphology and Hydrology of Karst Terrains by William B. White, 1988-05-05
  14. Geomorphology of Desert Dunes (Routledge Physical Environment Series) by Nicholas Lancaster, 1995-10-18

61. UC Berkeley Geomorphology
Information about faculty, courses, research, and publications at this University of California campus.
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~geomorph/
Berkeley Geomorphology
Group
Geomorphology at Berkeley People Courses Gilbert Club ... Department of Geography
If you have comments or suggestions, email: geomorph@socrates.berkeley.edu

62. Department Of Geomorphology, Adam Mickiewicz University
Department of geomorphology is one of the departments in the Institute of QuaternaryResearch.The research area refers to glacial, periglacial, fluvial and
http://www.man.poznan.pl/~geomorf/welcome.htm

Wersja polska

Department of Geomorphology is one of the departments in the Institute of Quaternary Research.The research area refers to glacial, periglacial, fluvial and aeolian environments as well as to Vistulian (=Weichselian) stratigraphy and palaeogeography, and their applications.
Department of Geomorphology
Adam Mickiewicz University

Science PAS Centre

ul. Wieniawskiego 17/19
61-713 Poznan, Poland
tel. +48 61-8528503 extn. 241
fax +48 61-8520671
Some graphics based on
14 July 1998
glab@man.poznan.pl

issmer@man.poznan.pl

63. 10 Stream Team Home
USDA Forest Service organization that develops and implements methdologies for study of stream hydrology. Site provides information about physical aspects of wildland streams, especially fluvial geomorphology.
http://www.stream.fs.fed.us/index.html
Forest Service National Links Forest Service Home Employment International Forestry Just for Kids Publications Recreational Activities Stream Systems Technology Center About Us Contact Us Newsroom ... Related Websites
Stream Systems
Technology Center

USDA, Forest Service,
Rocky Mountain Research Station
2150 Centre Ave, Bldg. A, Suite 368
Fort Collins, CO 80526
What Is the Stream Systems Technology Center?
The Stream Systems Technology Center, or "STREAM TEAM " is a national technical center chartered to improve knowledge of stream systems and watershed hydrology, develop operational tools and technology, provide training and technical support, and identify research needs for the purpose of coordinating development of needed technology to secure favorable conditions of water flows.
What's New? The Stream Team website has a new look, designed for easier navigation and consistency with other Forest Service websites.

64. JosseyBass :: Geomorphology
geomorphology (36), Listings 125 26-36, Sort listing by
http://www.josseybass.com/cda/sec/0,,2768,00.html
By Keyword By Title By Author By ISBN By ISSN Shopping Cart My Account Help Contact Us ...
JosseyBass
Geomorphology
Earth Science Special Topics

Geography

Environmental Science

General Earth Science
...
Agriculture

Geomorphology (35) Listings:
Sort listing by: A-Z
Z-A

Publication Date
Author Aeolian Environments, Sediments and Landforms by Andrew S. Goudie (Editor), Ian Livingstone (Editor), Stephen Stokes (Editor) Hardcover, January 2000 US $170.00 Add to Cart Applied Geomorphology: Theory and Practice by R. J. Allison (Editor) Hardcover, June 2002 US $180.00 Add to Cart Arid Zone Geomorphology: Process, Form and Change in Drylands, 2nd Edition by David S. G. Thomas (Editor) Paperback, May 1998 US $140.00 Add to Cart Atlas of Mediterranean Environments in Europe: The Desertification Context by Paola Mairota (Editor), J. B. Thornes (Editor), N. A. Geeson (Editor) Hardcover, November 1997 US $650.00

65. Geomorfologia Wirtualna / Virtual Geomorphology
Electronic textbook assembled from links to online resources. Languages English, Polish.
http://main.amu.edu.pl/~sgp/gw/gw.htm
Geomorfologia
Wirtualna The Virtual
Geomorphology
utrzymywana przez Zbigniewa Zwoliñskiego
Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza
Poznañ maintained by Zbigniew Zwolinski
Adam Mickiewicz University
Poznan Wersja elektroniczna 1995- Electronic version 1995- Wprowadzenie do Geomorfologii Wirtualnej Introduction to the Virtual Geomorphology Jak mo¿esz dodaæ rozdzia³ do tego elektronicznego podrêcznika How you can add a section to this electronic textbook Przeszukaj witryne / Search this site:
Zastrze¿enie
Niektóre artyku³y zawarte w Geomorfologii Wirtualnej s± napisane z odmiennego punktu widzenia (np. z punktu widzenia kreacjonistów ) i nie s± oparte na dostêpnych przes³ankach naukowych.
Some papers included in The Virtual Geomorphology are written from a different viewpoint (e.g. creationist viewpoint) and are not based on an available scientific assessment.
"What is geomorphology?" by J.S.Kite
"Le dictionnaire de géomorphologie" by C.G.Genest
Spis tre¶ci
Table of contents
Systemy geomorfologiczne Geomorphological systems Geomorfologia teoretyczna Theoretical geomorphology ...
Earthweek - A Diary of the Planet
Geomorfologia Wirtualna jest ci±gle uzupe³niana. Proszê sprawdzaæ ponownie, aby zobaczyæ co jest nowego! The Virtual Geomorphology is continuously updated. Please check back soon to see what's new!

66. Expgeom Startframe
A key area of interest of the Laboratory for Experimental geomorphology is the study of the processes and mechanics of overland flow hydraulics and soil erosion, including raindrop impact, interrill and rill erosion, gully erosion and tillage erosion.
http://www.kuleuven.ac.be/facdep/geo/fgk/leg/pages/exphome.htm
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

67. Wiley Canada :: Geomorphology
geomorphology (36), Listings 125 26-36, Sort listing by
http://www.wileycanada.com/cda/sec/0,,2768,00.html
Shopping Cart My Account Help Contact Us
By Keyword By Title By Author By ISBN By ISSN Wiley Canada Geomorphology
Earth Science Special Topics

Geography

Environmental Science

General Earth Science
...
Agriculture

Geomorphology (35) Listings:
Sort listing by: A-Z
Z-A

Publication Date
Author Aeolian Environments, Sediments and Landforms by Andrew S. Goudie (Editor), Ian Livingstone (Editor), Stephen Stokes (Editor) Hardcover, January 2000 US $170.00 Add to Cart Applied Geomorphology: Theory and Practice by R. J. Allison (Editor) Hardcover, June 2002 US $180.00 Add to Cart Arid Zone Geomorphology: Process, Form and Change in Drylands, 2nd Edition by David S. G. Thomas (Editor) Paperback, May 1998 US $140.00 Add to Cart Atlas of Mediterranean Environments in Europe: The Desertification Context by Paola Mairota (Editor), J. B. Thornes (Editor), N. A. Geeson (Editor) Hardcover, November 1997 US $650.00

68. Our Hoosier State Beneath Us: Geomorphology
geomorphology. Anderson Falls Bear Creek Canyon and Portland ArchBluespring Caverns a unique system of Hoosier caves Bluffs of
http://www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/etext/hoosier/gm.html
Geomorphology
Anderson Falls
Bear Creek Canyon and Portland Arch
Bluespring Caverns: a unique system of Hoosier caves
Bluffs of Beaver Bend: a scenic feature of Martin County ...
Wyandotte Cave

69. Research Webpages For John Orwin
Academic research pages for John F. Orwin with alpine geomorphology links, details of research and images of mountain landscapes from around the globe.
http://publish.uwo.ca/~jforwin/index.htm
Updated Saturday March 01, 2003

70. Geomorphology Homepage

http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/clageo/

71. Earth Surface Systems Research Group, University Of Durham
Information about education opportunities and research in geomorphology, including sediment and solutes transport and landform modelling.
http://www.geography.dur.ac.uk/research/groups/earth/earth.html

72. Geography 323 -- Geomorphology
Click here to continue.
http://uregina.ca/~sauchyn/geog323/
Click here to continue. Click here to continue.

73. The CfA Sea Level Homepage
Information about the effects sea level change on coastal geomorphology from the HarvardSmithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/space_geodesy/SEALEVEL/

The CfA Space Geodesy Homepage

The CfA Sea Level Homepage

Sea Level Hazards: Impact to coastal wetlands
Beach erosion

Inundation of land

Increased flood and storm damage
... Additional Resources This webpage was created by Stacey Archfield
Welcome to the CfA Sea Level Homepage!
Hazards of Sea Level Rise: An Introduction Sea level is rising worldwide and is caused by both natural and human factors. Most research indicates that sea level is rising approximately 2mm/yr. Although 2 mm/yr. seems to be a relatively small amount of change, a small increase in sea level can have devastating effects. Other factors such as glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) are causing coastal lands to sink, increasing the rate of sea level rise for those areas. Fortunately, in some areas of the world, GIA is causing land to rise allowing for some compensation to rising sea level. Since greater than 75 percent of the human population will live within 60 km of a coast by 2000 [Michener et al., 1997], it is important that the effects of any change in sea level rise are studied. There is no physical capacity that humans have to protect against long term sea level rise. The key to coping with sea level rise is education of the effects and accurate assessments of hazards for given points in time. In this way, humans can act decisively and appropriately to minimize loss of life, and economic and ecological impacts. Education is the only long-term, far-reaching solution to sea level rise. Sea level has fluctuated by an order of 100 meters over the last 18,000 years [Michener et al., 1997]. Global sea level can change due to three factors: 1-Change in the volume of the ocean basins, 2-Expansion or shrinking of ocean water due to changes in climate and 3-Periods of worldwide glacial advance and retreat [Davis, 1997]. Human impact has no control over changing the volume of the ocean basins. However, the greenhouse effect can cause the ocean to gather thermal inertia that will heat the continents and slowly melt the polar ice caps, increasing sea level worldwide [Michener et al., 1997].

74. Geomorphology
geomorphology, Back Home. The Virtual geomorphology; Color LandformAtlas of the US; An Introduction to Quantitative geomorphology.
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Runway/8783/geomorphology.html
Geomorphology Back Home

75. Earth Surface Processes And Landforms
Journal for the publication of research papers on all aspects of geomorphology. Published by John Wiley Sons, Ltd.
http://www.interscience.wiley.com/jpages/0197-9337/
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms provides a journal for the publication of research papers on all aspects of geomorphology interpreted in its widest sense. Online ISSN: 1096-9837
Print ISSN: 0197-9337
Contact Us

The Journal of the British Geomorphological Research Group

76. Land Use History Of The Colorado Plateau-Geomorphology
Toolsgeomorphology. Photo © 1999 by Ray Wheeler. geomorphology is the studyof the forms of the Earth's surface and of the processes that mold them.
http://www.cpluhna.nau.edu/Tools/geomorphology.htm
Search the CP-LUHNA Web pages
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeoastronomy
BIOLOGICAL
Packrat Middens
Amphibians and Reptiles

Arthropods

Birds
...
Pollen
CHRONOLOGICAL
Dendrochronology
Fire Scars

Radiocarbon Dating

Other Techniques
GEOGRAPHICAL
GIS
Remote Sensing
GEOLOGICAL
Stratigraphic Sediments
Geomorphology

Volcanism
Glaciers
HISTORICAL
Land Surveys Written Histories Repeat Photography Stream Gaging
Geomorphology
Author: Diane Rowland, Center for Environmental Sciences and Education, Northern Arizona University Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park in southwestern Utah. The unusual ecosystem in this valley contains both old-growth ponderosa pine forest and Sahara-like dune sand. Photo © 1999 by Ray Wheeler Geomorphology is the study of the forms of the Earth's surface and of the processes that mold them. More recent geologic features - sand dunes, rivers, soils, lake basins, and alluvial fans, to name a few - are in most cases still undergoing formational processes. The response of these features to recent changes in climate and land use makes geomorphology an important tool for understanding our changing global climate and the effects of our increasingly intensive use of the landscape.

77. Landform Analysis
Journal of the Association of Polish Geomorphologists, publishing original scientific works in all aspects of geomorphology, in English. Includes information on submissions and subscriptions, plus tables of contents for some past issues.
http://main.amu.edu.pl/~sgp/la/laintr.htm
Landform Analysis
Journal of the Association of Polish Geomorphologists
Founded by Stefan Kozarski
Published by the University of Silesia
and the Association of Polish Geomorphologists The purpose of the Landform Analysis is to publish articles of high scientific or practical interest in any aspects of geomorphological studies. Language of the journal is English. Publication is free of page charge and author will receive free 25 offprints of the paper plus one copy of a particular volume. The Editorial Board would particularly welcome the submission of papers not yet published. However, in certain cases papers published originally in other languages than English will also be taken into consideration. It is intended to enable dissemination of scientific achievements of scientists from non English speaking countries (e.g. from Central and Eastern Europe). Join the Landform Analysis as an author and a reader! Home Volumes Editorial Board Submission Comments Aims and scope Cele i zakres Landform Analysis publishes original scientific works which concern all aspects of geomorphology. The works which considerably reach beyond geomorphological studies (e.g. stratigraphy, lithology, chemical composition of deposits, computer models, cartographic and remote sensing problems) will not be published if they are not associated with analysis of landforms, their evolution, morphogenetic processes and new methods in geomorphology.

78. The Colorado Plateau Region (part 4 Of 4)
A Textbook of geomorphology. Erosional patterns. Whaleskin crossbedding patterns,Navajo Sandstone narrows, Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, Utah.
http://www.cpluhna.nau.edu/Places/coloplateau4.htm
Search the CP-LUHNA Web pages
The Colorado Plateau
The Vast and the Intimate
Suspended in Time

A Textbook of Geomorphology
...
Utah
Places
Aquarius Plateau, Utah
Arches NP, Utah

Arizona Strip

Black Mesa, Arizona
...
Zion NP, Utah
The Colorado Plateau Region (page 4 of 4)
Author Ray Wheeler Adapted from: The Colorado Plateau Region, In Wilderness at the Edge: a citizen proposal to protect Utah's canyons and deserts , Utah Wilderness Coalition, Salt Lake City, 1990, p. 97-104.
A Textbook of Geomorphology
Whaleskin crossbedding patterns, Navajo Sandstone narrows, Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, Utah. Phot © 1996 Ray Wheeler The land surface holds more recent geologic history frozen in stone. There are petrified sand dunes and ripple marks, inverted valleys, entrenched river meanders, and whole forests of petrified trees. Asked by the National Park Service to identify potential "Natural Landmarks" on the Colorado Plateau, two teams of geologists dashed into the field like starving children let loose in a candy store, and returned with a list of no fewer than 110 sites which deserve national recognition as classic displays of geologic phenomena. "In no other province in America," they wrote in their report, "are the relationships between morphology and geology more clearly or graphically revealed."

79. Bathymetry Of Lake Michigan
Lake Michigan geomorphology. geomorphology Text Outline Abstract; DataPreparation; Mackinac Channel (area 5); Two Rivers Ridge (area 2);
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/greatlakes/lakemich_cdrom/html/geomorph.htm
Great Lakes Data Rescue Project - Lake Michigan Bathymetry
Introduction Geomorphology Raster data files Vector data files ... Images
Lake Michigan Geomorphology
Geomorphology Text Outline
ABSTRACT
The Bathymetry of Lake Michigan [return to top of document]
PREPARATION OF LAKE MICHIGAN BATHYMETRY
Bathymetry has been compiled using the entire array of good-quality historical hydrographic soundings collected in support of nautical charting over a 120-year period by the NOAA National Ocean Service and its predecessor agency for Great Lakes surveying, the Army Corps of Engineers. More than 600,000 bathymetric soundings were employed, of which approximately 60 per cent were already in digital form, 25 per cent were digitized in conjunction with this effort, and the remaining 15 per cent were available only on paper survey sheets. Density of tracklines is generally about 2000m for the open lake and ranges from 200m to 600m for nearshore areas. Soundings collected since 1903 were already reduced to the Lake Michigan mean low water datum; these were used for bathymetric contouring without further calibration or adjustments. Soundings collected prior to 1903 were reduced to the mean low water datum. In preparation for bathymetric contouring, digital soundings were converted to metric units and plotted in color; separate colors were assigned to the various depth ranges. From the paper sheets, contours in metric units were generated directly on overlays; these contours were then reduced to the compilation scale of 1:250,000 and incorporated into the map. Compilation sheets were then scanned and vectorized; and the resulting digital vector bathymetric contour data were used to generate the imagery shown on the large color plate. Images were constructed using the publicly-available software

80. Coastal PR
Introduction to the terminology and major research fields of coastal geomorphology, from the Geological Oceanography Program of the University of Puerto Rico.
http://rmocfis.uprm.edu/~morelock/cstln.htm
The character of shorelines results from the geological factors that set the stage and the physical processes that script the present story. To understand the development of coastal landforms, we must consider such things as tidal influences, wave climate, rock resistance, shoreline configuration and offshore bathymetry. The coast is a meeting place of energies in which rivers carry sediment to the sea where it is redistributed by marine processes. If the waves and currents cannot keep pace with the sediment supply, then deltas, bars, and other depositional features build the coast seaward. Where marine forces are stronger, the sediments are distributed across the shelf. This chapter attempts to integrate short- and long-term factors into an understanding of why our world's coastlines are the way they are today. Once an overall view has been presented, we discuss the individual environments that are part of today's coastlines ( i.e. , beaches, estuaries). And finally, we discuss the ever-changing coastal landscape, focusing first on natural changes and then on how man fits (or doesn't) into this as either a passive inhabitant or an active player trying to control his surroundings. The world's coastlines are comprised of a variety of complex environments that are controlled by geologic setting, sediment supply and local physical processes. Dividing coastal environments for the sake of discussion is difficult because such features as beaches, dunes, tidal flats, and marshes are often part of a larger system that is best understood in its entirety rather than by examining its components. On the other hand, it is impractical to discuss all possible combinations. As a compromise, the individual components are described, within a discussion of the more important depositional systems that they can make up. It is important to remember that each section of coastline is part of a larger coastal mosaic, the behavior of which is the result of interactions. By necessity, an extensive literature is covered in very few pages. The reader wanting more details is referred especially to the book by Davis

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