Throughflow as a mechanism responsible for excessive soil salinisation in non-irrigated, previously arable lands in the Western Australian wheatbelt: A field study
- 31 December 1975
- Vol. 2, 31-67
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0341-8162(75)80004-x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- IMPLICATIONS and CAUSES OF SALINITY PROBLEMS IN THE WESTERN AUSTRALIAN WHEATBELT: THE YORK-MAWSON AREAAustralian Geographical Studies, 1973
- Drainage basin expansion and the nine unit landsurface modelAustralian Geographer, 1973
- Soil Piping and Stream Channel InitiationWater Resources Research, 1971
- Partial Area Contributions to Storm Runoff in a Small New England WatershedWater Resources Research, 1970
- Some Erosional Features due to Piping and Sub-Surface Wash with Special Reference to the SudanGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 1970
- OCCURRENCE OF SOIL SALINITY IN THE DRY LANDS OF SOUTHWESTERN ALBERTACanadian Journal of Soil Science, 1968
- Aspects of the hydrologic cycle and related salinity in the Belka valley, Western AustraliaSoil Research, 1964
- The role of seepage moisture in soil formation, slope development, and stream initiationAmerican Journal of Science, 1961
- Weathering and Subsurface Erosion in Granite at The Piedmont Angle, Balos, SudanGeological Magazine, 1958
- PipingEOS, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 1954