Bis zu 50 % günstiger als neu 3 Jahre rebuy Garantie Professionelles Refurbishment
ElektronikMedien
Tipps & News

Handgeprüfte Gebrauchtware

Bis zu 50 % günstiger als neu

Der Umwelt zuliebe

Biological and Inorganic Factors in the Destruction of Limestone Coasts

J Schneider (Broschiert, Deutsch)

Keine Bewertungen vorhanden
Optischer Zustand
Beschreibung
These investigations were carried out mainly on the coast of the northern Adriatic near Rovinj (Istria, Yugoslavia). The general applicability of the results achieved there was tested by comparison with Bermuda, Florida and Marseille. The process of destruction of a limestone coast is explained in terms of a complex interrelationship of biological and inorganic factors. The physical and chemical parameters relevant to the waters of tidal- and rock-pools were deter- mined over periods of 24 hours. They showed that the rock-pool waters are incapable of dissolving the carbonate substrate inorganically. These waters are always oversaturated with respect to CaCO3, day and night. Variations in their alkalinity can be partly biologically explained, since it is shown that cyanophytes can assimilate bicarbonate. It is therefore not necessarily valid to use variations in alkalinity to calculate CaCO3 dissolution or precipitation in milieus with a high biological productivity. The rock-pool floors are densely populated by epi- and endolithic algae, fungi and lichens which prevent any direct exchange between the water and the carbonate substrate and consequently inhibit inorganic dissolution which is of limited significance in coastal destruction. The coastal profile is subdivided according to obvious colour-zones. Both morphological and biological zonations conform to this subdivision. Endolithic and epilithic algae (Cyanophyceae, Chlorophyceae), fungi and lichens corrode the rock by etching processes. Grazing gastropods rasp away the microflora together with rock particles. The morphological forms resulting from biological corrosion and biological abrasion may be termed biokarst. Both modes of destruction contribute to deposition in the subtidal zone. A first estimate for the northeastern Adriatic suggests that the destruction of limestone coast contributes about 15 % of the total sedimentation rate. The rate of destruction varies from zone to zone and has not yet been quantified for all zones. On average it amounts to O.25-1.0 mm per year. Applications to fossil sediments are offered in terms of distribution, ecology, and boring behaviour of the endolithic microflora as well as their fossilization potential.
Dieses Produkt haben wir gerade leider nicht auf Lager.
ab 2,79 €
Derzeit nicht verfügbar
Derzeit nicht verfügbar

Handgeprüfte Gebrauchtware

Bis zu 50 % günstiger als neu

Der Umwelt zuliebe

Technische Daten


Erscheinungsdatum
01.01.1976
Sprache
Deutsch
EAN
9783510570065
Herausgeber
Schweizerbart'sche, E.
Serien- oder Bandtitel
Contributions to Sedimentary Geology (früher: Contributions to Sedimentology)
Sonderedition
Nein
Autor
J Schneider
Seitenanzahl
112
Einbandart
Broschiert
Bandzählung
6
Schlagwörter
coast, Kalkstein, inorganic, geology, anorganisch, Sediment, Küste, Zerstörung, limestone, sediment, destruction, Geologie
Thema-Inhalt
RBG - Geologie und die Lithosphäre
Höhe
240 mm
Breite
16 cm

Warnhinweise und Sicherheitsinformationen

Informationen nach EU Data Act

-.-
Leider noch keine Bewertungen
Leider noch keine Bewertungen
Schreib die erste Bewertung für dieses Produkt!
Wenn du eine Bewertung für dieses Produkt schreibst, hilfst du allen Kund:innen, die noch überlegen, ob sie das Produkt kaufen wollen. Vielen Dank, dass du mitmachst!