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19 pages, 4662 KB  
Article
Morphological Parameters of Gullies Formed on Sandy Soils and Effects of Check Dams in Central Spain
by Jorge Mongil-Manso, Joaquín Navarro-Hevia, Javier Velázquez, Virginia Díaz-Gutiérrez and Ana-Carolina Toledo-Rocha
Geosciences 2025, 15(6), 208; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences15060208 - 3 Jun 2025
Viewed by 825
Abstract
Gully erosion constitutes a significant global problem, as gullies are a substantial source of sediment that harms rivers, affecting aquatic fauna and water quality, altering flow regimes, and degrading soil, among other impacts. Gullies have been extensively studied in clayey soils, where they [...] Read more.
Gully erosion constitutes a significant global problem, as gullies are a substantial source of sediment that harms rivers, affecting aquatic fauna and water quality, altering flow regimes, and degrading soil, among other impacts. Gullies have been extensively studied in clayey soils, where they occur more frequently, but less so in soils or materials with a sandy texture. Therefore, utilizing field measurements and aerial orthophotography, this study characterizes the morphology of a set of gullies located in the Central System mountains (central Spain), formed on sandy soils derived from granite weathering, under a Mediterranean-continental climate. Furthermore, the influence of check dams on the gully slope is also studied. The selected gullies for this study are permanent, linear, parallel, continuous, V-shaped, and semi-active. They are longer, narrower, and shallower than other gullies in significantly different soils with which they have been compared, although the width/depth ratio is similar. Additionally, check dams have considerably reduced the slope (11% on average and a 23% maximum reduction), which may result in a reduction in the flow velocity and erosive capacity. Consequently, it can be affirmed that the presence of numerous check dams significantly affects gully morphology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Geomechanics)
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23 pages, 14330 KB  
Article
Prediction Capability of Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) in Badland Susceptibility Mapping: The Foglia River Basin (Italy) Case of Study
by Margherita Bianchini, Stefano Morelli, Mirko Francioni and Roberta Bonì
Land 2025, 14(3), 651; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14030651 - 19 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1628
Abstract
Badland morphologies are prominent examples of linear erosion occurring on clay-rich slopes and are critical hotspots for sediment production. Traditional field-based mapping of these features can be both time-consuming and costly, particularly over larger basins. This research proposes a novel methodology for assessing [...] Read more.
Badland morphologies are prominent examples of linear erosion occurring on clay-rich slopes and are critical hotspots for sediment production. Traditional field-based mapping of these features can be both time-consuming and costly, particularly over larger basins. This research proposes a novel methodology for assessing badland susceptibility through a multi-criteria decision-making framework known as the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP). This methodology, developed and tested in the Foglia River basin of the Marche region (Italy), facilitates the identification and mapping of badland areas. More in detail, our study resulted in the creation of a comprehensive badland inventory and susceptibility map for the 102 km2 study area, identifying 276 badlands using a combination of satellite imagery, historical orthophotos, existing regional inventories, and field inspections. Key predisposing factors, including geological, land use, topographical, and hydrometric elements, were systematically analyzed using the AHP approach. The research findings indicate that badlands develop in medium to steep slopes oriented towards the southern quadrants and in proximity to watercourses; their formation is predominantly influenced by clayey–sandy lithology. The resulting inventory and susceptibility map serve as relevant tools for monitoring, preventing, and mitigating slope instability risks within the region. Full article
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23 pages, 11219 KB  
Article
New Paradigms for Geomorphological Mapping: A Multi-Source Approach for Landscape Characterization
by Martina Cignetti, Danilo Godone, Daniele Ferrari Trecate and Marco Baldo
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(4), 581; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17040581 - 8 Feb 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3260
Abstract
The advent of geomatic techniques and novel sensors has opened the road to new approaches in mapping, including morphological ones. The evolution of a land portion and its graphical representation constitutes a fundamental aspect for scientific and land planning purposes. In this context, [...] Read more.
The advent of geomatic techniques and novel sensors has opened the road to new approaches in mapping, including morphological ones. The evolution of a land portion and its graphical representation constitutes a fundamental aspect for scientific and land planning purposes. In this context, new paradigms for geomorphological mapping, which are useful for modernizing traditional, geomorphological mapping, become necessary for the creation of scalable digital representation of processes and landforms. A fully remote mapping approach, based on multi-source and multi-sensor applications, was implemented for the recognition of landforms and processes. This methodology was applied to a study site located in central Italy, characterized by the presence of ‘calanchi’ (i.e., badlands). Considering primarily the increasing availability of regional LiDAR products, an automated landform classification, i.e., Geomorphons, was adopted to map landforms at the slope scale. Simultaneously, by collecting and digitizing a time-series of historical orthoimages, a multi-temporal analysis was performed. Finally, surveying the area with an unmanned aerial vehicle, exploiting the high-resolution digital terrain model and orthoimage, a local-scale geomorphological map was produced. The proposed approach has proven to be well capable of identifying the variety of processes acting on the pilot area, identifying various genetic types of geomorphic processes with a nested hierarchy, where runoff-associated landforms coexist with gravitational ones. Large ancient mass movement characterizes the upper part of the basin, forming deep-seated gravity deformation, highly remodeled by a set of widespread runoff features forming rills, gullies, and secondary shallow landslides. The extended badlands areas imposed on Plio-Pleistocene clays are typically affected by sheet wash and rill and gully erosion causing high potential of sediment loss and the occurrence of earth- and mudflows, often interfering and affecting agricultural areas and anthropic elements. This approach guarantees a multi-scale and multi-temporal cartographic model for a full-coverage representation of landforms, representing a useful tool for land planning purposes. Full article
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15 pages, 230 KB  
Article
Bruce Springsteen, Rock Poetry, and Spatial Politics of the Promised Land
by Shankhadeep Chattopadhyay
Humanities 2024, 13(3), 75; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13030075 - 13 May 2024
Viewed by 2293
Abstract
The humanistic-geographical associations of popular music foster the potential to articulate the production and reproduction of an activity-centered politicized ontology of space in the everyday social life of any creative communitarian framework where an alternative set of lifestyles, choices, and tastes engage in [...] Read more.
The humanistic-geographical associations of popular music foster the potential to articulate the production and reproduction of an activity-centered politicized ontology of space in the everyday social life of any creative communitarian framework where an alternative set of lifestyles, choices, and tastes engage in a constant play. A cursory glimpse at the (counter-)cultural artistic productions of the American 1970s shows that the lyrical construction of real and imaginary geographical locales has remained a distinguishing motif in the song-writing techniques of the celebrated rock poets. In the case of Bruce Springsteen, whether it is the ‘badlands’, constituting the rebellious and notorious young adults, or the ‘promised land’, which is the desired destination of all his characters, his lyrical oeuvre has numerously provided an alternative sense of place. Springsteen’s lyrical and musical characterization of fleeting urban images like alleys, hotels, engines, streets, neon, pavements, locomotives, cars, etc., have not only captured the American cities under the changing regime of capital accumulation but also contributed to the inseparability of everyday social lives and modern urban experiences. Against the backdrop of this argument, this article seeks to explore how the socio-political and cultural aesthetics of Springsteen’s song stories unfurl distinct spatial poetics through their musical language. Also, the article attempts to delineate how Springsteen’s unabashed celebration of the working-class geography of the American 1970s unveils a site of cultural struggle, wherein existing social values are reconstructed amidst imaginary landscapes and discursive strategies of resistance are weaved. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music and the Written Word)
15 pages, 7670 KB  
Article
Controls on Soft Tissue and Cellular Preservation in Late Eocene and Oligocene Vertebrate Fossils from the White River and Arikaree Groups of Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming
by John E. Gallucci, Grace Woolslayer, Kelsey Barker, Brian Kibelstis, Allison R. Tumarkin-Deratzian, Paul V. Ullmann, David E. Grandstaff and Dennis O. Terry
Minerals 2024, 14(5), 497; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14050497 - 8 May 2024
Viewed by 3121
Abstract
Previous studies on microtaphonomy have identified multiple types of organic microstructures in fossil vertebrates from a variety of time periods and past environmental settings. This study investigates potential taphonomic, paleoenvironmental, and paleoclimatic controls on soft tissue and cellular preservation in fossil bone. To [...] Read more.
Previous studies on microtaphonomy have identified multiple types of organic microstructures in fossil vertebrates from a variety of time periods and past environmental settings. This study investigates potential taphonomic, paleoenvironmental, and paleoclimatic controls on soft tissue and cellular preservation in fossil bone. To this end, fifteen vertebrate fossils were studied: eight fossils collected from the Oligocene Sharps Formation of the Arikaree Group in Badlands National Park, South Dakota, and seven fossils from formations in the underlying White River Group, including the Oligocene Brule Formation of Badlands National Park, and the Eocene Chadron Formation of Flagstaff Rim, Wyoming; Toadstool Geologic Park, Nebraska; and Badlands National Park, South Dakota. A portion of each fossil was demineralized to identify any organic microstructures preserved within the fossils. We investigated several factors which may have influenced cellular/soft tissue decay and/or preservation pathways, including taxonomic identity, paleoclimatic conditions, depositional environment, and general diagenetic history (as interpreted through thin section analysis). Soft tissue microstructures were preserved in all fossil samples, and cellular structures morphologically consistent with osteocytes were recovered from 11 of the 15 fossil specimens. Preservation of these microstructures was found to be independent of taxonomy, paleoclimate regime, apatite crystallinity, depositional environment, and general diagenetic history, indicating that biogeochemical reactions operating within microenvironments within skeletal tissues, such as within individual osteocyte lacunae or Haversian canals, may exert stronger controls on soft tissue and biomolecular decay or stabilization than external environmental (or climatic) conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Bone Diagenesis)
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21 pages, 8736 KB  
Article
Rapid Mapping of Landslides Induced by Heavy Rainfall in the Emilia-Romagna (Italy) Region in May 2023
by Maria Francesca Ferrario and Franz Livio
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(1), 122; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16010122 - 27 Dec 2023
Cited by 18 | Viewed by 4075
Abstract
Heavy rainfall is a major factor for landslide triggering. Here, we present an inventory of 47,523 landslides triggered by two precipitation episodes that occurred in May 2023 in the Emilia-Romagna and conterminous regions (Italy). The landslides are manually mapped from a visual interpretation [...] Read more.
Heavy rainfall is a major factor for landslide triggering. Here, we present an inventory of 47,523 landslides triggered by two precipitation episodes that occurred in May 2023 in the Emilia-Romagna and conterminous regions (Italy). The landslides are manually mapped from a visual interpretation of satellite images and are mainly triggered by the second rainfall episode (16–17 May 2023); the inventory is entirely original, and the mapping is supplemented with field surveys at a few selected locations. The main goal of this paper is to present the dataset and to investigate the landslide distribution with respect to triggering (precipitation) and predisposing (land use, lithology, slope and distance from roads) factors using a statistical approach. The landslides occurred more frequently on steeper slopes and for the land use categories of “bare rocks and badlands” and woodlands. A weaker positive correlation is found for the lithological classes: silty and flysch-like units are more prone to host slope movements. The inventory presented here provides a comprehensive picture of the slope movements triggered in the study area and represents one of the most numerous rainfall-induced landslide inventories on a global scale. We claim that the inventory can support the validation of automatic products and that our results on triggering and predisposing factors can be used for modeling landslide susceptibility and more broadly for hazard purposes. Full article
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17 pages, 4425 KB  
Article
A New Model for Solving Hydrological Connectivity Inside Soils by Fast Field Cycling NMR Relaxometry
by Pellegrino Conte, Alessio Nicosia and Vito Ferro
Water 2023, 15(13), 2397; https://doi.org/10.3390/w15132397 - 28 Jun 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2199
Abstract
In this paper, a new quantitative approach for estimating the structural and functional connectivity inside soil by Fast Field Cycling (FFC) NMR relaxometry is presented, tested by measurements carried out in three samples with different texture characteristics. Measurements by FFC NMR relaxometry have [...] Read more.
In this paper, a new quantitative approach for estimating the structural and functional connectivity inside soil by Fast Field Cycling (FFC) NMR relaxometry is presented, tested by measurements carried out in three samples with different texture characteristics. Measurements by FFC NMR relaxometry have been carried out using water-suspended samples and Proton Larmor frequencies (νL) ranging in the 0.015–35 MHz interval. Two non-degraded soil samples, with different textural characteristics, and a degraded soil collected in a badland area, were analyzed. For a given soil and any applied Proton Larmor frequency, the distribution of the longitudinal relaxation times, T1, (i.e., relaxogram) measured by FFC NMR has been integrated, and the resulting S-shaped curve (i.e., relaxogram integration curve) was represented, for the first time, by Gumbel’s diagram. This new representation of the relaxogram integration curve, transforming the S-shaped curve into a straight line, allowed for distinguishing three linear components, corresponding to three different relaxation time ranges, characterized by three different slopes. Two points, identified by the abrupt slope changes of the relaxogram integration curve plotted in Gumbel’s diagram, are used to identify two characteristic values of relaxation time, T1A and T1B, which define three well-known pore size classes (T1 < T1A micro-pores, T1A < T1 < T1B meso-pores, and T1 > T1B macro-pores). The relaxogram integration curve allowed for calculating the non-exceeding empirical cumulative frequency, F(T1), corresponding to the characteristic T1A and T1B values. The analysis demonstrated that the relaxogram can be used to determine the pore-size ranges of each investigated sample. Finally, using the slope values of the three components of the relaxogram integration curve, a new definition of the Structural Connectivity Index, SCI, and Functional Connectivity Index, FCI, was proposed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hydrology)
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27 pages, 4219 KB  
Article
Structurally Controlled Landscape Evolution in Kula Badlands, Western Turkey
by Selçuk Aksay, Jeroen M. Schoorl, Antonie Veldkamp, Tuncer Demir, Ahmet Serdar Aytaç and Darrel Maddy
Geosciences 2022, 12(10), 390; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12100390 - 21 Oct 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3809
Abstract
Badlands are extensively eroded landscapes consisting of weakly consolidated deposits within highly dense drainage systems. Their controlling and shaping factors can differ in relation to various internal and external conditions and processes that are not always well understood. This study focuses on the [...] Read more.
Badlands are extensively eroded landscapes consisting of weakly consolidated deposits within highly dense drainage systems. Their controlling and shaping factors can differ in relation to various internal and external conditions and processes that are not always well understood. This study focuses on the development of a badland landscape affecting Miocene and Quaternary sand-clay sediments in the extensional tectonic regime of Western Turkey with a multidisciplinary approach. The area between Kula and Selendi towns exhibits a badland topography with extensively eroded surface features, deepened gullies within poorly consolidated, sand clay-sized sediments. The results of structural field mapping and morphometric analyses using a 5 m resolution DEM to study the role of structural control in the development of badlands are presented in this study. Field data analysis supported by the quantitative assessment of longitudinal gully profiles illustrates the role of pre-existing structures as faults, their orientation and geometry in net erosion-sedimentation and the development of deepened gully networks. Representative illustrations, field photographs and block diagrams are presented to show the relationship between the rock structure and badland landscape. The connection between the extensional tectonics, erosional dynamics and geomorphology point to a structurally-controlled landscape in the Kula badlands in Western Turkey. Full article
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15 pages, 4754 KB  
Article
Using Geovisualization Tools to Examine Attitudes towards Alcohol Exposure in Urban Environments: A Pilot Study in Madrid, Spain
by Andrea Pastor, Xisca Sureda, Roberto Valiente, Hannah Badland, Macarena García-Dorado and Francisco Escobar
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19(15), 9192; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159192 - 27 Jul 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3001
Abstract
Pervasiveness of alcohol products and their promotion in the urban landscape may normalize alcohol consumption. This study aims to utilize geovisualization-based methods to assess attitudes towards different levels of alcohol exposure in the urban environment. We selected a typical downtown location, Lavapiés Square [...] Read more.
Pervasiveness of alcohol products and their promotion in the urban landscape may normalize alcohol consumption. This study aims to utilize geovisualization-based methods to assess attitudes towards different levels of alcohol exposure in the urban environment. We selected a typical downtown location, Lavapiés Square in Madrid, Spain, to conduct our study. First, we designed and created realistic 3D models simulating three different urban scenes with varying degrees of exposure to alcohol in the environment. Second, we used a survey on 159 adults to explore the level of acceptance of, attitudes towards, and perceptions of alcohol exposure in each scene. Participants reported a higher level of comfort in the scene with null alcohol exposure compared with the other scenes (p < 0.001). Acceptance towards alcohol exposure decreased as the level of alcohol elements increased in the scenes (p < 0.01). Acceptance also decreased when children were present in the scenes (p < 0.01). This study demonstrated that geovisualization tools provide a useful and well-suited approach to analyze perceptions of the alcohol environment. The use of geovisualization can help understand attitudes and perceptions towards the alcohol environment and may offer a way to simulate different scenarios prior to development or retrofitting. Full article
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16 pages, 493 KB  
Review
Do Area-Level Environmental Factors Influence Employment for People with Disability? A Scoping Review
by Nicola Fortune, Bernadette Curryer, Hannah Badland, Jennifer Smith-Merry, Alexandra Devine, Roger J. Stancliffe, Eric Emerson and Gwynnyth Llewellyn
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19(15), 9082; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159082 - 26 Jul 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3235
Abstract
Employment is an important social determinant of health and wellbeing. People with disability experience labour market disadvantage and have low labour force participation rates, high unemployment rates, and poor work conditions. Environmental factors are crucial as facilitators of or barriers to participation for [...] Read more.
Employment is an important social determinant of health and wellbeing. People with disability experience labour market disadvantage and have low labour force participation rates, high unemployment rates, and poor work conditions. Environmental factors are crucial as facilitators of or barriers to participation for people with disability. Understanding how the physical, social, and economic characteristics of local areas influence employment for people with disability can potentially inform interventions to reduce employment inequalities. We conducted a scoping review of research investigating associations between area-level environmental factors and employment for people with disability. Eighteen articles published between 2000 and 2020 met the inclusion criteria, and data were extracted to map the current evidence. Area-level factors were categorised into six domains relating to different aspects of environmental context: socioeconomic environment, services, physical environment, social environment, governance, and urbanicity. The urbanicity and socioeconomic environment domains were the most frequently represented (15 and 8 studies, respectively). The studies were heterogeneous in terms of methods and data sources, scale and type of geographic units used for analysis, disability study population, and examined employment outcomes. We conclude that the current evidence base is insufficient to inform the design of interventions. Priorities for future research are identified, which include further theorising the mechanisms by which area-level factors may influence employment outcomes, quantifying the contribution of specific factors, and interrogating specific factors underlying the association between urbanicity and employment outcomes for people with disability. Full article
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25 pages, 2139 KB  
Article
Access to and Quality of Neighbourhood Public Open Space and Children’s Mental Health Outcomes: Evidence from Population Linked Data across Eight Australian Capital Cities
by Amanda Alderton, Meredith O’Connor, Hannah Badland, Lucy Gunn, Claire Boulangé and Karen Villanueva
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19(11), 6780; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19116780 - 1 Jun 2022
Cited by 15 | Viewed by 5154
Abstract
Neighbourhood-level interventions offer a promising opportunity to promote child mental health at a population level; however, neighbourhood effects are still regarded as a ‘black box’ and a better understanding of the specific design elements, such as public open space, is needed to inform [...] Read more.
Neighbourhood-level interventions offer a promising opportunity to promote child mental health at a population level; however, neighbourhood effects are still regarded as a ‘black box’ and a better understanding of the specific design elements, such as public open space, is needed to inform actionable policy interventions. Methods: This study leveraged data from a population linked dataset (Australian Early Development Census—Built Environment) combining information from a national census of children’s developmental outcomes with individualised geospatial data. Associations between access to (within 400 m and 800 m from home), and quality of, public open space and child mental health outcomes across eight capital cities were estimated using multilevel logistic regression models, adjusting for demographic and contextual factors. Access was defined based on proximity of public open space to children’s home addresses, within distance thresholds (400 m, 800 m) measured along the road network. Effect modification was tested across maternal education groups. Results: Across the eight capital cities, inequities in access to child friendly public open spaces were observed across maternal education groups and neighbourhood disadvantage quintiles. Children with access to any type of public open space within 800 m of home had lower odds of demonstrating difficulties and higher odds of competence. Children with access to child friendly public open spaces within 800 m of home had the highest likelihood of demonstrating competence. Conclusion: Improving access to neighbourhood public open space appears to be a promising strategy for preventing mental health difficulties and promoting competence in early childhood. Action is needed to redress socio-spatial inequities in access to child friendly public open space. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Designing Cities That Support Healthy Child Development)
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19 pages, 26241 KB  
Article
Assessment of Badlands Erosion Dynamics in the Adriatic Side of Central Italy
by Margherita Bufalini, Adel Omran and Alberto Bosino
Geosciences 2022, 12(5), 208; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12050208 - 13 May 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 3245
Abstract
Badlands are unique soil erosion landforms distributed in numerous geological, geomorphological, and climate contexts in several Mediterranean countries. The aim of this study was to map, classify, and analyze the temporal evolution of the badlands that crop out between the Tesino and Tronto [...] Read more.
Badlands are unique soil erosion landforms distributed in numerous geological, geomorphological, and climate contexts in several Mediterranean countries. The aim of this study was to map, classify, and analyze the temporal evolution of the badlands that crop out between the Tesino and Tronto Rivers in the Marche region, Central Apennines (Italy). In this study, 328 badlands landforms were mapped through Google Earth, orthophoto analysis (year 2016), and field surveys. Moreover, badlands were classified from a morphological point of view based on the active processes detected in the field. Additionally, badlands were studied from a lithological point of view, meaning they were strictly related to the soft sedimentary formations of the study area. Subsequently, through the analysis of a 10 × 10 m DEM, the most significant morphometric indices were extrapolated and badlands were classified. Finally, through the orthophotos from 1988, another badlands dataset was created and the area of each landform was compared with respect to the orthophotos from 2016. The multi-temporal air photo analysis, combined with the NDVI results, identified a general reduction trend in badlands areas, with increases in green cover and dense vegetation and changes in badlands morphotypes. Full article
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18 pages, 764 KB  
Article
Data to Decisions: Methods to Create Neighbourhood Built Environment Indicators Relevant for Early Childhood Development
by Karen Villanueva, Amanda Alderton, Carl Higgs, Hannah Badland and Sharon Goldfeld
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19(9), 5549; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19095549 - 3 May 2022
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 5059
Abstract
Healthy development in the early years lays the foundations for children’s ongoing physical, emotional, and social development. Children develop in multiple contexts, including their local neighbourhood. Neighbourhood-built environment characteristics, such as housing, walkability, traffic exposure, availability of services, facilities, and parks, are associated [...] Read more.
Healthy development in the early years lays the foundations for children’s ongoing physical, emotional, and social development. Children develop in multiple contexts, including their local neighbourhood. Neighbourhood-built environment characteristics, such as housing, walkability, traffic exposure, availability of services, facilities, and parks, are associated with a range of health and wellbeing outcomes across the life course, but evidence with early years’ outcomes is still emerging. Data linkage techniques were used to assemble a dataset of spatial (objectively-measured) neighbourhood-built environment (BE) measures linked to participant addresses in the 2015 Australian Early Development Census (AEDC) for children living in the 21 most populous urban and regional Australian cities (n = 235,655) to help address this gap. This paper describes the methods used to develop this dataset. This linked dataset (AEDC-BE) is the first of its kind worldwide, enabling opportunities for identifying which features of the built environment are associated with ECD across Australia at scale, allow comparisons between diverse contexts, and the identification of where best to intervene. National data coverage provides statistical power to model real-world complexities, such as differences by city, state/territory, and remoteness. The neighbourhood-built environment can be modified by policy and practice at scale, and has been identified as a way to help reduce inequitable early childhood development outcomes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Designing Cities That Support Healthy Child Development)
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12 pages, 2688 KB  
Article
Root Functional Traits and Water Erosion-Reducing Potential of Two Indigenous C4 Grass Species for Erosion Control of Mudstone Badlands in Taiwan
by Jung-Tai Lee, Yu-Syuan Lin, Cheng-Ying Shih and Ming-Jen Lee
Water 2022, 14(9), 1342; https://doi.org/10.3390/w14091342 - 20 Apr 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2608
Abstract
In southern Taiwan, mudstone badland accounts for over 1000 km2 of the upstream region of watersheds. Rainstorms often induce interrill and surface erosion on the mudstone slopes. Furthermore, the large quantity of soils detached by surface runoff result in severe sedimentation in [...] Read more.
In southern Taiwan, mudstone badland accounts for over 1000 km2 of the upstream region of watersheds. Rainstorms often induce interrill and surface erosion on the mudstone slopes. Furthermore, the large quantity of soils detached by surface runoff result in severe sedimentation in reservoirs. Thus, soil erosion control of mudstone badlands represents one of the most pressing problems in reservoir watershed management. Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers. (Bermuda grass) and Eremochloa ophiuroides (Munro) Hack. (Centipedegrass) are two native predominant C4 grass species appearing on mudstone badlands. They play a key role in erosion control and the revegetation of mudstone slopes. Nevertheless, their root functional traits and water erosion-reducing potential have not been investigated. In this study, the root traits were examined. Vertical pullout and tensile tests were conducted to measure root pullout resistance and root tensile strength. Hydraulic flume tests were also performed to evaluate their water erosion-reducing potentials. The results demonstrated that the root systems of C. dactylon and E. ophiuroides grasses all belonged to the fibrous M-type. C. dactylon had remarkably better root traits compared to those of E. ophiuroides. Furthermore, the root tensile resistance of C. dactylon was remarkably higher than that of E. ophiuroides. In addition, hydraulic flume tests showed that C. dactylon has remarkably smaller soil detachment rates than that of E. ophiuroides. Altogether, our data clearly show that C. dactylon has better root traits, root pullout resistance, root tensile resistance and water erosion-reducing potential than E. ophiuroides and is more suitable for erosion control of mudstone badland. Further studies on large-scale implementation techniques of these species for efficient vegetation restoration are needed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Landslides Induced by Surface and Groundwater)
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42 pages, 37819 KB  
Article
Deforestation by Afforestation: Land Use Change in the Coastal Range of Chile
by Andreas C. Braun
Remote Sens. 2022, 14(7), 1686; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14071686 - 31 Mar 2022
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 5069
Abstract
In southern Chile, an establishment of a plantation-based forest industry occurred early in the industrial era. Forest companies claim that plantations were established on eroded lands. However, the plantation industry is under suspicion to have expanded its activities by clearing near-natural forests since [...] Read more.
In southern Chile, an establishment of a plantation-based forest industry occurred early in the industrial era. Forest companies claim that plantations were established on eroded lands. However, the plantation industry is under suspicion to have expanded its activities by clearing near-natural forests since the early 1970s. This paper uses a methodologically complex classification approach from own previously published research to elucidate land use dynamics in southern Chile. It uses spatial data (extended morphological profiles) in addition to spectral data from historical Landsat imagery, which are fusioned by kernel composition and then classified in a multiple classifier system (based on support, import and relevance vector machines). In a large study area (~67,000 km2), land use change is investigated in a narrow time frame (five-year steps from 1975 to 2010) in a two-way (prospective and retrospective) analysis. The results are discussed synoptically with other results on Chile. Two conclusions can be drawn for the coastal range. Near-natural forests have always been felled primarily in favor of the plantation industry. Vice versa, industrial plantations have always been primarily established on sites, that were formerly forest covered. This refutes the claim that Chilean plantations were established primarily to restore eroded lands; also known as badlands. The article further shows that Chile is not an isolated case of deforestation by afforestation, which has occurred in other countries alike. Based on the findings, it raises the question of the extent to which the Chilean example could be replicated in other countries through afforestation by market economy and climate change mitigation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Remote Sensing)
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