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ENVS2016 Landforms & Soils: Landscape Systems 2

Later Year Course

Offered By Fenner School
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Environmental Science
Offered in First Semester, 2010
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

As a southern hemisphere continent that has been geologically stable for millennia, Australia has developed a unique combination of landforms, regolith and soils. The factors important to the evolution of Australia and the processes by which these landform, regolith and soil assemblages make up the Australian landscape are the focus of this course.

Geological, geomorphological, ecological and biogeochemical processes form the basis of an analysis of how landforms have come to exist; how the mantle of regolith and soils forms across the landscape; and the role of the biota are featured in this analysis. Modules include the weathering of the underlying geology, the evolution of hill slopes and valleys, erosion and deposition of materials in the terrestrial landscape, the development of the regolith mantle, and ultimately the formation of soils on the surface. The age of the Australian landscape adds to the complexity and relict and palaeo landforms are considered, as are relict materials and formations in regolith and palaeosols. To complete the course a module on the interactions of humans with the landscape includes both Aboriginal land management and Caucasian settlement, and the evidence of landscape and regolith evolution in the recent past.

Indicative Assessment

Written assignments (25%) and field reports (50%) with either a portfolio or an examination (25%).

Workload

65 contact hours, comprising lectures, seminars, workshops and field classes

Areas of Interest Resource Management and Environmental Science
Requisite Statement

24 units towards a degree

Incompatibility

with SRES2006 or SRES2016

Preliminary Reading

Corbett, J.R. (1969) The Living Soil, Martindale Press.

Young, A. and R. Young (2001) Soils in the Australian Landscape, Oxford, Melbourne.

Majors/Specialisations Geography and Archaeology Practice
Science Group B
Academic Contact Dr John Field, Dr Richard Greene, and John.Field@anu.edu.au

The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions