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Understanding Soil Change : Soil Sustainability over Millennia, Centuries, and Decades

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Across the world, soils are managed with an intensity and at a geographic scale never before attempted, yet we know remarkably little about how and why managed soils change through time.

Understanding Soil Change explores a legacy of soil change in south-eastern North America, a region of global ecologic, agricultural and forestry significance: from the acidic soils of primary hardwood forests that covered the region until about 1800, through the marked transformations affected by long-cultivated cotton, to contemporary soils of rapidly growing and intensively managed pine forests.

These well-documented records significantly enrich the science of ecology and pedology, and provide valuable lessons for land management throughout the world.

The book calls for the establishment of a global network of soil-ecosystem studies, like the invaluable Calhoun study on which the book is based, to provide further information on sustainable land management, vital as human demands on soil continue to increase.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521039436 / 9780521039437
Paperback / softback
16/08/2007
United Kingdom
272 pages, 33 Tables, unspecified; 10 Halftones, unspecified; 63 Line drawings, unspecified
155 x 234 mm, 391 grams