Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 356
pro vyhledávání: '"James Grove"'
Autor:
Birmingham Archaeology
14 pages text, 12 figures, 40 plates
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::0bbba4bb291c1d18750ca02d2297f916
Autor:
Susan Lawrence, Peter Davies, Greg Hil, Ian Rutherfurd, James Grove, Jodi Turnbull, Ewen Silvester, Francesco Colombi, Mark Macklin
Publikováno v:
Geoarchaeology.
Publikováno v:
The Holocene. 31:1158-1174
Bucket dredging to mine and extract gold and tin from rivers is a global industry that has had a range of negative effects on physical environments. These include the destruction of riparian soil profiles and structures, artificial channel straighten
Autor:
Francesco Colombi, Carrie Monohan, Allan James, Mark G. Macklin, James Grove, Susan Lawrence, Peter Davies, Jodi Turnbull, Ewen Silvester, Ian Rutherfurd, Alex Keeble-Toll
Publikováno v:
Water History. 13:45-73
People and water intersect in the movement of sediment downstream in rivers. Social processes and geomorphological processes become entangled as each system moves in ways that trigger corresponding responses from the other. Long-term dialectical rela
Autor:
Ian D. Rutherfurd, Thom Gower, James Grove, Christine Arrowsmith, Geoff Vietz, Ben Dyer, Alex Sims
The River Murray is Australia’s largest and most important river. It carries water for irrigation and city supply from the mountains in the east, semi-arid west. The river crosses a series of low-angle alluvial fans (distributive fluvial systems) i
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::258fcc2d65d11c0ad2f5b7d8df42d710
https://doi.org/10.5194/icg2022-181
https://doi.org/10.5194/icg2022-181
Autor:
Peter Davies, Jodie Turnbull, Susan Lawrence, James Grove, Martin Thoms, Ian Rutherfurd, Christine Kenyon
Publikováno v:
River Research and Applications. 36:522-541
European settlement has led to increased loads of fine suspended sediment (SS) entering the River Murray, Australia's largest, and arguably, most important river. The River Murray's anthropogenic sediment history can be divided into four periods with
Autor:
Peter Davies, Susan Lawrence, Ewen Silvester, Mark G. Macklin, James Grove, Jodi Turnbull, Ian Rutherfurd
Publikováno v:
Geoarchaeology. 35:384-399
Mobilisation of large volumes of bedrock, regolith and soil has long been a characteristic feature of metal mining. Prior to the 20th century this was most efficiently achieved through harnessing the motive power of water. Large-scale water use in mi
Autor:
F Colombi, Mark G. Macklin, Peter Davies, Ian Rutherfurd, Jodi Turnbull, Ewen Silvester, James Grove, Susan Lawrence
Publikováno v:
Preview. 2019:44-56
The Victorian gold rush began in 1851, resulting in massive demographic, land use, and social changes (Serle 1968). Rivers, during much of the gold mining history of Victoria, were used as a “free” resource, both to extract and process sediment.
Autor:
Ian Rutherfurd, Adrian Kitchingman, J. C. Stout, Zeb Tonkin, James Grove, A. J. Webb, Jarod Lyon
Publikováno v:
Water Resources Research. 54:8828-8846
A growing worldwide body of literature is demonstrating the geomorphic and ecological roles played by wood in rivers. After more than a century of removing wood from rivers in many parts of the world, researchers and managers are now interested in re
Autor:
Peter Davies, Ian Rutherfurd, Susan Lawrence, Jodi Turnbull, James Grove, Darren S. Baldwin, Mark G. Macklin, Ewen Silvester
Publikováno v:
Anthropocene. 21:1-15
A significant but previously unquantified factor in anthropogenic change in Australian rivers was the release of large volumes of sediment produced by gold mining in the 19th century. This material, known historically as ‘sludge’, rapidly entered