Advances in techniques to assess soil erodibility Julian CooperSoil erodibility is the susceptibility of soil to the erosive forces of rainsplash, runoff and wind. It is a significant factor in determining present and future soil erosion rates. Focusing on soil erosion by water, this chapter shows that erodibility is determined by static and dynamic soil properties that control a range of sub processes affecting soil erosion, but there is no standardised test procedure, making comparison of erodibility assessment
excavations north of the Wall of the Crow
In the 1960s and 1970s
dreams and hopes of children and teenagers in contemporary Ireland
and their proof that the unemployed can organize themselves to renew the struggle for a more just world
The second volume in this highly collectable series covers the years 1969–70
Tasos Leivaditis made his stunning literary debut in 1952-53 with three poetry books
belief and opinion in the context of a radically changed communications infrastructure
But he has also proved a controversial figure
produced in more than 100 countries
This collection examines ghostly presences (and absences) in both classic and lesser-known Gothic texts from the beginning of the genre to the present in a global context
spanning all genres and emotions
recounts his attempt to establish a colony in West Africa with British settlers to demonstrate that cooperation between Africans and Europeans could supply the tropical produce provided by West Indian plantations