However, identifying the role of natural climate change versus human activity (e.g. agriculture) on soil evolution is difficult. Here we show that for most of the past 12,300 years soil erosion and development were impacted differently by natural climate variability, as recorded by sediments ...
Human Activities Effects refer to the various environmental impacts on the Earth caused by human actions. These effects drive multiple interacting environmental changes, influencing the planet's ecosystems and natural resources. AI generated definition based on:Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability,...
Senesi, G. S.et al.Trace element inputs into soils by anthropogenic activities and implications for human health.Chemosphere39(2),343-377 (1999). doi: 10.1016/S0045-6535(99)00115-0. Vega, F.A., Covelo, E.F. & Andrade, M. L.Accidental organochlorine pesticide contamination of soil...
Human activities have been very active in the region and during 1990-2010, 146.01 and 197.62 km2 of land were converted, respectively, to forests and grassland, with corresponding increases of 87.56 and 77.05%. In addition, a large number of check dams have been built up in the upper ...
wind erosionInappropriate anthropogenic activities such as overcultivation and overgrazing of steppe and excessive collection of fuelwood are largely responsible for current desertification in China. However, quantitative information concerning the impacts of human disturbance on soil erosion remains sparse. ...
However, human activities controlled desertification expansion in the downstream and parts of the midstream and upstream of the basin. 474 JOURNAL OF ARID LAND 2013 Vol. 5 No. 4 Fig. 6 Spatial distribution of the human and climate factors responsible for (a) desertification expansion and (b) ...
Changes in streamflow and sediment discharge and the response to human activities in the middle reaches of the Yellow River.doc,Hydrol.EarthSyst.Sci.Discuss.,7,6793–6822,2010 /7/6793/2010/ doi:10.5194/hessd-7-6793-2010 Hydrology and Earth System Science
medicines [16,39,41]. On the other hand, the destruction of biodiversity is a serious risk to human health, as emerging infectious diseases can result from human activities affecting biodiversity. Due to human activities that degrade ecosystems and biodiversity, there is a growing risk of ...
Increasing human activities could be responsible for the development of the swamp [21]. The end of LPAZ F1a is characterized by a decrease in green alga and the higher values of fungi spores and Clasterosporium caricinium, suggesting a drier environment and the formation of peat deposit. ...
The role of climate in the deltaic evolution was likely surpassed by human activities around 2 ka due to two major events. Firstly, the PRD experienced a rapid growth of human population, owing to the large-scale migra- tion from the central regions of China in the Qin Dynasty (221–...