Welcome to The 7th International CO2 Conference Web Site!

     Information
 
Overview
Conference
Themes
Conference
History
Scientific Tours
Press Contacts
Venue
Visas
Scientific
Committee
Planning
Committee
Poster
Information
Hosts
Sponsors
Supporting
Businesses
Download
Schedule
Charles Keeling
Tellus
Help

     Latest Comments
· Re: Conference Feedback
by Georgii.Alexandrov
· Re: Conference Feedback
by Peter.Koehler
· Re: Conference Feedback
by Ankur.Desai
· Re: Conference Feedback
by guest
· Re: Conference Feedback
by Steven.Oncley
· Re: THE CHANGING CARBON CYCLE
by Jose.Navar-Chaidez
· Re: PERSISTENCE OF NITROGEN LIMITATION OVER TERRESTRIAL CARBON UPTAKE
by Jose.Navar-Chaidez
· Re: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF CO2, CH4 AND N2O FLUXES IN THE TERRESTRIAL ECOSY
by Georgii.Alexandrov
· Re: CLIMATE CHANGE: DESIGNING AN EFFECTIVE RESPONSE
by Connie.Uliasz
· Re: CLIMATE CHANGE: DESIGNING AN EFFECTIVE RESPONSE
by Jonathan.Callahan

 The Influence of Soil and Water Management on Carbon Erosion and Burial

by Eric Sundquist

Human activities have altered rates of carbon erosion from soils and carbon deposition in sediments. We are developing methods to quantify the present-day and historical effects of these changes on the carbon mass balance of the conterminous U.S. land surface. Because our analysis uses a combination of diverse existing datasets, we devote particular attention to methods for the estimation of uncertainties that are consistent with the statistical character of the source data.

Link to Abstract
Link to Slides



 
     Login
Username

Password


     Related Links
· More about
· News by admin


Most read story about :
Radiative Forcing from a Boreal Forest Fire


     Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly


"Login" | Login | 2 comments | Search Discussion
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous Viewers, please login

Re: The Influence of Soil and Water Management on Carbon Erosion and Burial (Score 1)
by Martin.Heimann on Wednesday, September 28 @ 10:10:26 MDT
(User Info)http://www.bgc-jena.mpg.de/~martin.heimann
Eric: If I understand it correctly, your study concerns organic carbon fluxes only. There is some evidence that the Mississippi shows increased alkalinity exports to the ocean, which implies changes in weathering rates (and associated sink of CO2 by weathering). Is this negligible compared to the soil erosion rates?






The 7th International CO2 Conference

The Omni Interlocken Resort
September 25th - 30th
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.05 Seconds