Synopsis top ↑
Loess materials affect some environmental and climatological factors
in the atmosphere and are also of immense value to mankind after
accumulation on land surface where they provide the basis of a
productive agriculture in many continents. Some of the best and most
fertile agricultural land areas in the world occur in the loess
regions of Europe and China. These and other loess areas are, however,
also very sensitive to soil erosion and slope failure, e.g. by
mudflows and landslides. Because of this our workshop “Loess
Geomorphological Processes and Hazards” highlighted both the eolian
dust cycle of erosion, transport and deposition and the system of
water erosion and erosion control of loess layers. This volume
contains case studies of basic and applied research from several loess
areas in the world, including the largest, the Yellow River basin and
its Loess Plateau.
The main topics discussed in this volume deal with the sources of
loess material and formation of the Loess Plateau in China (by Zhang
Linyuan, Dai Xuerong & Shi Zhengtao), erosional process by splash
detachment (by G. Govers), transport and deposition processes of
eolian dust from Chinese and African deserts (by K. Inoue & T. Naruse,
A. Rapp & T. Nihlen, T. Littmann, K.Rogner & W. Smykatz-Kloss),
deformation mechanism of loess material (by Miao Tiande & Wang
Zhenggui), comparison between landforms of loess and loess-like
materials (by S. Yokoyama, Y. Matsukura & T. Suzuki) and landslides in
the loess district in China (by E. Derbyshire, Wang Jingtai, Jin
Zexian, A. Billard, Y. Egels, D.K.C. Jones, M. Kasser, T. Muxart &
L. Owen).