90 Bierman, Clapp, Nichols, Gillespie, and Caffee primarily in the uppermost several meters of rock and soil (Figure 1), they are sensitive monitors for the residence times of materials near Earth's surface; over long time frames and if landscape behavior approaches steady- ...
CITATION STYLE
Bierman, P., Clapp, E., Nichols, K., Gillespie, A., & Caffee, M. W. (2001). Using Cosmogenic Nuclide Measurements In Sediments To Understand Background Rates Of Erosion And Sediment Transport. In Landscape Erosion and Evolution Modeling (pp. 89–115). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-0575-4_5
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