Understanding Soil Change: Soil Sustainability Over Millennia, Centuries, and Decades
by Daniel D. Richter, Daniel Markewitz, William A. Reiners, Pedro Antonio Sanchez
| Format: | Paperback 272 pages |
|---|
Available to order
Usually despatched in 2-3 weeks
£31.00
Delivered FREE
in the UK
Synopsis
Across the world, soils are managed with an intensity and at a geographic scale never before attempted, yet we know remarkably little about how and why managed soils change through time. Understanding Soil Change explores a legacy of soil change in south-eastern North America, a region of global ecologic, agricultural and forestry significance: from the acidic soils of primary hardwood forests that covered the region until about 1800, through the marked transformations affected by long-cultivated cotton, to contemporary soils of rapidly growing and intensively managed pine forests. These well-documented records significantly enrich the science of ecology and pedology, and provide valuable lessons for land management throughout the world. The book calls for the establishment of a global network of soil-ecosystem studies, like the invaluable Calhoun study on which the book is based, to provide further information on sustainable land management, vital as human demands on soil continue to increase.
Book details
Published
16/08/2007
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISBN
9780521039437
Other books by this author See all titles
This book can be found in...
The prices displayed are for website purchases only, and may differ to the prices in Waterstones stores.











