dc.date.accessioned |
2019-01-22T20:48:10Z |
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dc.date.available |
2019-01-22T20:48:10Z |
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dc.date.issued |
2018 |
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dc.identifier.issn |
1755-1307 |
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dc.identifier.uri |
https://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/148843 |
|
dc.description.abstract |
© Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. A general trend of erosion processes over the last 50-60 years can be estimated by dating sediments washed off from arable lands and accumulated in the first-order dry valleys bottoms. Three small (first-order) catchments were chosen as objects of the study. They are located, respectively, in the southern part of the taiga zone, the zone of temperate broad-leaf forests and the forest-steppe zone of the Russian Plain. To date the sediments accumulated in the bottoms the radioactive caesium-137 (137Cs) of global (since 1954) and Chernobyl origin (1986) had been used as a chronomarker. The average (for all the catchments) sedimentation rates during the global137Cs fallout period (1963(1954)-1986) are at least 0.88-2.71 cm per year.For the period that has passed since the Chernobyl accident (1986-2015(2016)) the average rates were 0.15-1.07 cm per year. The greatest reduction in the sedimentation rates is observed in the subzone of the southern taiga, the lowest one is in the forest-steppe zone of the Russian Plain. The main reason for such significant reduction in the rates of sedimentation of the soil erosion products in the dry valley bottoms was a reduction of surface runoff within the catchments during a snowmelt period, as well as crop-rotation changes there. |
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dc.relation.ispartofseries |
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science |
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dc.title |
Preliminary estimating the contemporary sedimentation trend in dry valley bottoms of first-order catchments of different landscape zones of the Russian Plain using the<sup>137</sup>Cs as a chronomarker |
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dc.type |
Conference Paper |
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dc.relation.ispartofseries-issue |
1 |
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dc.relation.ispartofseries-volume |
107 |
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dc.collection |
Публикации сотрудников КФУ |
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dc.source.id |
SCOPUS17551307-2018-107-1-SID85042208912 |
|