Editorial: Landscape evolution of the tropical regions: Dates, rates and beyond
editorial
Fecha
2022Autor
Pupim, Fabiano do Nascimento
Gautheron, Cécile
Braun, Jean-Jacques
Quesada Román, Adolfo
Cornu, Sophie
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
The Tropics represent a large portion of Earth’s continents, including the highest
mountains, ancient flat surfaces, arid landscapes, major rivers, floodplains, and deltas.
These contrasting landscapes play critical roles in land-sea sediment fluxes,
biogeochemical cycles, global climate change, critical zone processes, biodiversity
conservation, and supporting densely populated urban centers. Studying these
landscapes since the 19th century, geoscientists have gained a greater understanding
of how they were formed and evolved through time. However, a recent boom in new
methods and techniques has allowed the quantification of the timing and rates of the
processes that shape these landscapes and has driven a transformative revolution in
understanding tropical surface dynamics.
In this Research Topic, we bring together the contributions of scientists from across
disciplines who share a common interest in applying quantitative approaches to
investigate the internal and surface processes that drive landscape evolution in the
Tropics. It gathers six original articles covering unresolved questions about the timing
and rates of tropical weathering and river and wetlands evolution.
External link to the item
10.3389/feart.2022.1089942Colecciones
- Geografía [182]
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