Soil production and the soil geomorphology legacy of Grove Karl Gilbert

dc.contributor.author

Richter, DD

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Eppes, MC

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Austin, JC

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Bacon, AR

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Billings, SA

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Brecheisen, Z

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Ferguson, TA

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Markewitz, D

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Pachon, J

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Schroeder, PA

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Wade, AM

dc.date.accessioned

2020-08-01T15:41:52Z

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2020-08-01T15:41:52Z

dc.date.issued

2020-01-01

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2020-08-01T15:41:50Z

dc.description.abstract

© 2019 The Authors. Soil Science Society of America published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Soil Science Society of America Geomorphologists are quantifying the rates of an important component of bedrock's weathering in research that needs wide discussion among soil scientists. By using cosmogenic nuclides, geomorphologists estimate landscapes’ physical lowering, which, in a steady landscape, equates to upward transfers of weathered rock into slowly moving hillslope-soil creep. Since the 1990s, these processes have been called “soil production” or “mobile regolith production”. In this paper, we assert the importance of a fully integrated pedological and geomorphological approach not only to soil creep but to soil, regolith, and landscape evolution; we clarify terms to facilitate soil geomorphology collaboration; and we seek a greater understanding of our sciences’ history. We show how the legacy of Grove Karl Gilbert extend across soil geomorphology. We interpret three contrasting soils and regoliths in the USA's Southern Piedmont in the context of a Gilbert-inspired model of weathering and transport, a model of regolith evolution and of nonsteady systems that liberate particles and solutes from bedrock and transport them across the landscape. This exercise leads us to conclude that the Southern Piedmont is a region with soils and regoliths derived directly from weathering bedrock below (a regional paradigm for more than a century) but that the Piedmont also has significant areas in which regoliths are at least partly formed from paleo-colluvia that may be massive in volume and overlie organic-enriched layers, peat, and paleo-saprolite. An explicitly integrated study of soil geomorphology can accelerate our understanding of soil, regoliths, and landscape evolution in all physiographic regions.

dc.identifier.issn

0361-5995

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1435-0661

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21227

dc.language

en

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Wiley

dc.relation.ispartof

Soil Science Society of America Journal

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10.1002/saj2.20030

dc.subject

Science & Technology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Soil Science

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Agriculture

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COSMOGENIC NUCLIDES

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PRODUCTION-RATES

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HILLSLOPE SOILS

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ORGANIC-CARBON

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UNITED-STATES

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MODEL

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TOPOGRAPHY

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SEDIMENT

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EROSION

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CLIMATE

dc.title

Soil production and the soil geomorphology legacy of Grove Karl Gilbert

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Brecheisen, Z|0000-0002-3712-1725

duke.contributor.orcid

Wade, AM|0000-0002-1577-3968

pubs.begin-page

1

pubs.end-page

20

pubs.issue

1

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Nicholas School of the Environment

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Environmental Sciences and Policy

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Duke

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Student

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

84

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