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Earth Surface Processes, Landforms and Sediment Deposits

Earth Surface Processes, Landforms and Sediment Deposits

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John Bridge, Robert Demicco
Cambridge University Press, 5/1/2008
EAN 9780521857802, ISBN10: 0521857805

Hardcover, 832 pages, 25.4 x 20.3 x 4.4 cm
Language: English

Earth surface processes, landforms and sediment deposits are intimately related - involving erosion of rocks, generation of sediment, and transport and deposition of sediment through various Earth surface environments. These processes, and the landforms and deposits that they generate, have a fundamental bearing on engineering, environmental and public safety issues; on recovery of economic resources; and on our understanding of Earth history. This textbook brings together the traditional disciplines of sedimentology and geomorphology to explain Earth surface processes, landforms and sediment deposits in a comprehensive and integrated way. It is the ideal resource for a two-semester course in sedimentology, stratigraphy, geomorphology, and Earth surface processes from the intermediate undergraduate to beginning graduate level. The book is also accompanied by a website hosting illustrations and material on field and laboratory methods for measuring, describing and analyzing Earth surface processes, landforms and sediments.

Part I. Introduction
1. Definitions, rationale and scope of the book
2. Overview of the Earth
Part II. Production of Sediment at the Earth's Surface
3. Weathering of rocks, production of terrigenous sediment, and soils
4. Biogenic and chemogenic sediment production
Part III. Fundamentals of Fluid Flow, Sediment Transport, Erosion and Deposition
5. Unidirectional turbulent water flow, sediment transport, erosion and deposition
6. Air flow, sediment transport, erosion and deposition
7. Multidirectional water flow, sediment transport, erosion and deposition
8. Movement of sediment by gravity
9. Generation and movement of volcaniclastic sediment
10. Ice flow, sediment transport, erosion and deposition
11. Biogenic and chemogenic depositional structures
12. Post-depositional deformation of soft sediment
Part IV. Environments of Erosion and Deposition
13. Rivers, alluvial plains and fans
14. Lakes
15. Coasts and shallow seas
16. Arid environments
17. Glacial and periglacial environments
18. Deep seas and oceans
Part V. Sediment into Rock
Diagenesis
19. Diagenesis
Part VI. Long-term, Large-Scale Processes
Mountains and Sedimentary Basins
20. Tectonic, climatic and eustatic controls on long-term, large-scale erosion and deposition
References
Index.

'... very accessible and well organised ... a suitable candidate for undergraduate courses in Earth Science and associated disciplines, and the detail found in some sections will benefit graduate-level students and professionals.' Progress in Physical Geography