Vignettes are stand-alone, illustrated electronic case studies that teach about geomorphology, surface processes, and/or Quaternary history. Vignettes can be used alone or in combination with the "Key Concepts in Geomorphology", the first in a new generation of textbooks. Vignettes allow faculty to customize the learning resources they offer students to enrich and personalize student learning experiences.
Subject: Geomorphology Show all
- Coastal-zone 28 matches
- Fluvial 105 matches
- Glacial/Periglacial 52 matches
- Hillslopes 48 matches
- Karst 8 matches
- Mass Movement 31 matches
- Volcanoes 7 matches
Geoscience > Geology > Geomorphology > Landforms/Processes
132 matches General/OtherResults 21 - 30 of 201 matches
A decade of stream response to the La Valle Dam removal, Baraboo River, Wisconsin
Samantha Greene, University of Wisconsin-Madison
During Euro-American settlement throughout the United States, settlers built milldams along streams to harness energy. Often, the construction of a milldam improved the economic future of the community. These dams ...
Vignette Type: Process
Uplift rates and vertical fault displacements derived from marine terraces, Crete, Greece
Sean Gallen, Colorado State University
Introduction: Long-lived and continuing uplift and pervasive extensional faulting are a testament to the active tectonics of the island of Crete, located in the eastern Mediterranean (Figure 1). Large earthquakes ...
Vignette Type: Stratigraphy, Process, Chronology
Knickpoint migration and landscape evolution, Cullasaja River Basin, North Carolina
Sean Gallen, Colorado State University
Introduction: Localized high topographic relief, steep slopes, and frequent mass wasting — features commonly associated with tectonically active settings — characterize the landscapes of the southern ...
Vignette Type: Process
Defining rates of erosion using terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides in the Himalaya
Lewis Owen, North Carolina State University
The Himalaya and Tibet comprise the greatest mountain mass on our planet, stretching for ~ 2000 km east-west and >1500 km north-south with an average elevation of ~5000 m above sea level. The mountain mass ...
Vignette Type: Process
Quaternary glaciation of the Himalaya and Tibet
Lewis Owen, North Carolina State University
The mountains of the Himalaya and Tibet are the most glaciated regions outside of the polar realm. The countries within and bordering the Himalaya and Tibet depend greatly on the glacial and associated hydrological ...
Vignette Type: Chronology, Stratigraphy
Natural and anthropogenic impacts on a freshwater wetland, Lake Bogoria, Kenya
gail ashley, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Introduction Wetlands are an important water resource in arid regions (<400 mm annual precipitation) and may also provide grazing opportunities for farm animals. Permanent freshwater wetlands are also important ...
Vignette Type: Process
Soil geomorphology and change over time: A case study from the Catawba River, North Carolina
Anthony Layzell, University of Kansas Main Campus
Despite their value in Quaternary studies, relatively few soil chronosequences or long-term landscape evolution studies exist for the Piedmont physiographic province of the southeastern United States. Investigating ...
Vignette Type: Stratigraphy, Process, Chronology
Fire geomorphology: Fire-related erosion helps to shape our landscapes
Kerry Riley
The frequency of large wildfires has increased on all vegetated continents (Bowman et al., 2009). Wildfires can have profound influences on erosion rates, particularly in steep mountain basins. Fire-related ...
Vignette Type: Stratigraphy, Process, Chronology
Geomorphic Setting & Archaeology of the Cunene River, Namibia
Kathleen Nicoll, University of Utah
Introduction This vignette presents a virtual tour of the Cunene River, and a prehistoric archaeological site located on a fluvial terrace in northern Namibia. Today the Cunene River is an important transnational ...
Vignette Type: Stratigraphy, Process, Chronology
Living on a slippery slope: Case studies of geologic hazards from the Wasatch Front, Utah
Kathleen Nicoll, University of Utah
Throughout their history, humans have fought the natural elements; we build shelters, roads, hospitals and malls wherever we can engineer "solutions" and strategies that permit us to thrive, even in harsh ...
Vignette Type: Process