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Alpine surface soil movement

Date

1969

Authors

Zoghet, Mouine Fahed, author
Dils, Robert E., advisor
Mogren, Edwin W., committee member
Whicker, F. Ward, committee member
Danielson, Robert E., committee member
Striffler, William D. (William David), committee member

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

During 1967 and 1968 a study was conducted to determine the rate and type of alpine surface soil movement in the vicinity of Crown Point, Roosevelt National Forest in northcentral Colorado. Five different colors of fluorescent pigments were used successfully to index the movement of soil particles quantitatively and qualitatively. Sediment was collected from 32 micro-runoff collectors over the w inter and snowmelt period of 1968, and over the summer period of the same year. Rates and patterns of actual soil particle movement were obtained from 15 transects (each about 15 meters long), representing the different site characteristics. Results indicated that creep erosion was the most important mechanism of soil movement in the alpine. On sites exposed to wind action, wind erosion was responsible for movement of soil particles less than 2 mm in size. Snow deposition, frost, rain-drops, wind, grazing, slope, vegetation and microtopography were the most important factors in accounting for surface soil movement in this alpine area.

Description

Covers not scanned.
Print version deaccessioned 2021.

Rights Access

Subject

Soil physics

Citation

Associated Publications

Meiman, James R. Little South Poudre Watershed and Pingree Park Campus. Colorado State University, College of Forestry and Natural Resources (1971). http://hdl.handle.net/10217/70382

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