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Giménez Díaz, Rafael

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Giménez Díaz

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Rafael

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Ingeniería

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IS-FOOD. Research Institute on Innovation & Sustainable Development in Food Chain

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0000-0003-3210-0578

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6698

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Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Progress in gully erosion research: IV International Symposium on Gully Erosion
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    The classic forms of water erosion of the soil comprise sheet, rill, and gully erosion. According to the concept most generalized, in sheet erosion, thin layers of material are uniformly removed from the soil surface due to the action of an overland flow, in a homogeneous manner, over the area affected. This results in a normally very gradual and inappreciable loss of soil. However, in rill and gully erosion, the soil loss is caused by the intense action of a concentrated flow, which thus triggers the formation of small or large channels, i.e. rills or gullies, although the mechanisms implicated in either form of concentrated flow erosion are not identical. One of the main differences probably lies in the (much) greater interrelation between the roughness of the channel bed and the hydraulics of the water flow observed in a eroded rill, with respect to what occurs in a typical gully. So, the latter, as a physical process, deserves a special and specific study. Gully erosion, of world-wide importance, is catalogued by some of the principal centres devoted to soil resource conservation as being the foremost problem to be solved. As it is one of the most serious forms of water erosion, this phenomenon is capable of generating major soil losses even though it covers limited land surfaces. Additionally, the damage caused by this type of erosion frequently spreads beyond the area directly affected, i.e. through the siltation of lakes and reservoirs due to the large amounts of sediments it originates. Nevertheless, gully erosion has not received the attention that it warrants from the scientific community. For instance, a rapid search through any important virtual library shows that only less than 10% of soil erosion studies published up to now in international scientific journals deal directly and specifically with gully erosion. More research and surveys are required in order to obtain a better understanding of the physical mechanisms involved in this type of erosion, with the ultimate aim of developing accurate prediction algorithms and efficient control and damage prevention systems. In fact, there are so many unanswered questions on this important environment topic that scientists all over the world have been holding periodic meetings, in which the latest knowledge and advances in the study of gully erosion have been expounded. The first of these meetings was held in Leuven (Belgium) in 2000, the second in Sicuani (China) in 2002 and the third in Oxford, Mississippi (U.S.A.) in 2004. On that last occasion, the participants proposed that Pamplona (Spain) should be the seat of the following meeting, to be held in September 2007. This book contains the abstracts both from the key speeches and from the contributions presented in the IV International Symposium on Gully Erosion held in Pamplona, in September, 2007.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Implications of recent experimental findings for rill erosion modeling
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Govers, G.; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Van Oost, K.; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    The major aim of this paper is to critically review the theoretical concepts that are underpinning current models of rill flow and sediment detachment in the light of recent experimental results and, when necessary, to propose modifications to the theoretical formulations so that they are in agreement with experimental evidence. We also investigate to what extent a detachment model of reduced complexity, which is based on experimental observations, is consistent with field observation on the effect of topography on rill erosion.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Hydrological effects of the sediments deposited off a hillslope affected by rill erosion: project outlines and preliminary results
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    The main objectives of this project are (i) to evaluate the sedimentation rate generated by rill erosion in a hillslope and the granulometric characteristics of the sediment deposited off this hillslope, and (ii) to determine the incidence of this sediment on the hydrological properties of the sedimentation area. In addition, an extra aim is to gain insight into the spatial and temporal evolution of a rill network under field condition.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Photogrammetrical and field measurement of gullies with contrasting morphology
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Marzolff, I.; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Seeger, M.; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Ries, J. B.; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    Despite a wealth of studies on monitoring different types of gullies by using remote-sensing technique such as photogrammetry, relatively few efforts have been made to test their accuracy. Therefore the question arises as to what extent the accuracy of gully monitoring using photogrammetric technique depends on gully morphology. The objective of this work is to investigate this issue. To do that, we confront field measurements of cross-sectional areas of gullies with contrasting morphology with a similar dataset obtained using photogrammetry. Below, we present the first findings of this investigation.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Effect of topography on retreat rate of different gully headcuts in Bardenas Reales area (Navarre, Spain)
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    In Northeast Spain, gullying is a widespread phenomenon. This type of erosion is especially intense in Bardenas Reales (Navarre) where at least two major typical kinds of gully headcut are present. A first group developed in soil material (named, conventional gully headcut), and second group of gully headcut with a sandstone layer as a top horizon (named, sandstone gully headcut). In addition, within the former group, we can distinguish a subgroup of gully headcuts developed in soils particularly prone to piping and tunnelling due to the dispersive condition of the materials (named piping associated gully headcut). In this situation, a question arises: to what extent simple topographic parameters account for the retreat rate of the different kind of gully headcuts observed in the region of Bardenas Reales? The aim of this study was to investigate and gain insight in this issue.