Mapping plant communities within quasi‐circular vegetation patches using tasseled cap brightness, greenness, and topsoil grain size index derived from GF-1 imagery

Author(s):  
Qingsheng Liu ◽  
Chong Huang ◽  
He Li
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
María Cecilia Ferrero ◽  
Sebastián R Zeballos ◽  
Juan I Whitworth-Hulse ◽  
Melisa A Giorgis ◽  
Diego E Gurvich

2008 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivier Moine ◽  
Denis-Didier Rousseau ◽  
Pierre Antoine

AbstractA loess sequence has been sampled continuously at high resolution in Nussloch (Rhine Valley, Germany) for malacological and grain-size analyses between ca. 34 and 20 ka. Molluscan abundance and richness, percentage in hygrophilous species and grain-size index show cyclical variations related to the lithological loess–gley alternation. Major molluscan abundance maxima were triggered by temperature increases through an enhancement of the reproduction cycle, whereas cyclical richness fluctuations and percentage in hygrophilous species reflect variations in local humidity and changes in the environmental mosaic. Malacological parameters allow the distinction of four environmental phases organised in cyclical successions correlated with most of the loess–gley doublets. The correlation of the grain-size index of the Nussloch loess sequence with the dust content of the GRIP ice core demonstrates the synchronicity of major molluscan abundance maxima and δ18O increases characterising temperature increases during Dansgaard–Oeschger interstades. A schematic model is proposed to link the North Atlantic Dansgaard–Oeschger climatic oscillations with local environmental changes indicated by both malacofauna and pedostratigraphy. This malacological study of the Nussloch loess sequence thus provides new information about the response of terrestrial loessic palaeoenvironments to millennial-timescale climatic fluctuations during the Upper Weichselian (∼ marine isotope stage 2 (MIS 2) and end of MIS 3).


2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-86
Author(s):  
Sulderdene Erdenesumbee ◽  
Geun Sang Lee ◽  
Yun Woong Choi ◽  
Jang Ki Song ◽  
Gi Sung Cho

2002 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 879-893 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simonetta Cola ◽  
Paolo Simonini

The main feature of the shallowest quaternary basin of the well-renowned historic city of Venice, Italy and its surrounding lagoon, is the presence, apparently without any regular trend in depth and site, of a predominant silt fraction. This is always combined with clay and (or) sand, forming a chaotic and erratic interbedding of different sediments whose mineralogy is however variable in a relatively narrow range due to a unique geological origin and a common depositional environment. After a brief description of the basic soil indexes of the Venice lagoon soil, the present study, based on a comprehensive geotechnical laboratory investigation, describes the range of variation of the most relevant time-independent geotechnical properties. Moreover, a new grain size index, combining the geometrical characteristics of the particle distribution, is introduced. It is shown that the soil response at large and very small strains can be related to this grain size index, which appears to be able to include the influence of the soil grading on the description of the overall mechanical behavior.Key words: silt, mechanical behavior, Venice soil, grain-size index, laboratory investigation, critical state parameters.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 1959-1990
Author(s):  
D.-D. Rousseau ◽  
P. Antoine ◽  
N. Gerasimenko ◽  
A. Sima ◽  
M. Fuchs ◽  
...  

Abstract. Loess deposits are widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere, where they have recorded not only the glacial-interglacial cycles, but also millennial-timescale changes resembling those in marine and ice cores. Such abrupt variations are clearly marked in Western European series, but have not yet been evidenced in the east of the continent. Here we present results of the high-resolution investigation of a Weichselian Upper Pleniglacial loess sequence (~38–15 ka) from Stayky, Ukraine. The stratigraphy shows an alternation of loess horizons and embryonic soils, similar to sequences from Western Europe. Similarities are also found between variations of a grain-size index (ratio between coarse and fine material fractions) in Stayky and in Western European profiles. Based on these similarities, and in agreement with the luminescence dates, the embryonic soils are associated to the Greenland interstadials (GIS) 7 to 2, and the Vytachiv paleosol at the base of the sequence, to GIS 8. Pollen analysis indicates a wetter climate for these interstadials, allowing the development of arboreal vegetation, than for the stadials, marked by loess formation. The grain-size index reaches the highest values for intervals correlated with the Heinrich events 3 and 2. Thus, it appears that the North Atlantic abrupt climate changes have extended their influence and modulated the loess sedimentation at least as far as in Eastern Europe. This result is supported by recent climate modeling experiments, and recommends the Stayky sequence as a reference for further comparisons between profiles along the Eurasian loess belt centered at 50° N.


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