The impact of mining on the landscape [electronic resource] : a study of the Upper Silesian coal basin in Poland / Renata Dulias.
2016
TD195.M5
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Title
The impact of mining on the landscape [electronic resource] : a study of the Upper Silesian coal basin in Poland / Renata Dulias.
Author
ISBN
9783319295411 (electronic book)
3319295411 (electronic book)
9783319295398
3319295411 (electronic book)
9783319295398
Published
Switzerland : Springer, 2016.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (viii, 209 pages) : illustrations.
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-319-29541-1 doi
Call Number
TD195.M5
Dewey Decimal Classification
622
Summary
This book investigates the Upper Silesian Coal Basin (USCB), one of the oldest and largest mining areas not only in Poland but also in Europe. Using uniform research methods for the whole study area, it also provides a summary of the landscape transformations. Intensive extraction of hard coal, zinc and lead ores, stowing sands and rock resources have caused such extensive transformations of landscape that it can be considered a model anthropogenic relief. The book has three main focuses: 1) Identifying anthropogenic forms of relief related to mining activity and presenting them from a spatial, genetic and age perspective; 2) Determining the changes in the morphometric characteristics of relief and the conditions for matter circulation in open systems (drainage basins) and closed systems (land-locked basins) caused by the extraction of mineral resources; and 3) Estimating the extent of anthropogenic denudation using two different methods based on raw-material output and morphometric analysis. In Poland, no other mining area has undergone such intensive mining activity as the Upper Silesian Coal Basin during the last half century. Its share in the total extraction of mineral resources was as high as 32%. The total extraction of hard coal in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin from the mid-18th century until 2009 was the sixth largest in the world, and the permanent, regional effects of mining anthropopressure on the relief are among the most severe in the world. The anthropogenic denudation rate in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, as well as the Ruhr Coal Basin (Ruhr District) and the Ostrava-Karvina Coal Basin, ranges from several dozen up to several hundred times higher than the rate of natural denudation, irrespective of the calculation method used. It would take the natural denudation processes tens of thousands of years to remove the same amount of material from the substratum as that removed through human mining activity.
Note
"This book is a revised and translated version of: Denudacja antropogeniczna na obszarach górniczych na przykładzie Górnośla̜skiego Zagłe̜bia We̜glowego, 2013."
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed April 26, 2016).
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Series
Environmental science and engineering (Springer (Firm))
Available in Other Form
Print version: 9783319295398
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Table of Contents
From the Contents: Introduction
Human activity as a geomorphic factor
Impact of mining on landscape
Anthropogenic denudation as a research problem
Research methods and data sources
Environment of study area
A brief history of mining in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin.
Human activity as a geomorphic factor
Impact of mining on landscape
Anthropogenic denudation as a research problem
Research methods and data sources
Environment of study area
A brief history of mining in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin.