The Balkans - the Most Erosive Part of Europe?
ثبت نشده
چکیده
Soil erosion has been occurring over the geological time. Inappropriate human activities accelerate this process. Soil erosion by water is a widespread problem throughout Europe. The South and Southeast regions of Europe are significantly prone to water erosion. In parts of the region, erosion has reached a stage of irreversibility and in some places erosion has practically ceased because there is no soil left. Scientists from the Balkan countries faced with the erosion problem for years, paid significant attention to solving problems with erosion. The aim of this study is to compare the results of water erosion intensity in the Balkan countries with other European countries. The basic methodological approach in this paper is an analysis of secondary data, using the method of “content analyses” of various data sources. Inductive and deductive qualitative analysis was used and finally the method of “comparative analysis” is applied too. Through the analysis of national researches, it was estimated that erosion intensity in Balkan countries is 548 m3km-2 (similar to 5.48 tha-1) and the total amount of annual produced erosive material is 419.9*106 m3. The mean European average annual erosion intensity is 3.13tha-1. The most erosive countries in Europe are the Balkan countries, Albania and Montenegro where the mean annual intensity of erosion is > 10 tha-1. Кључне речи: erosion intensity, soil loss, Balkan
منابع مشابه
European Integration and Transformation in the Western Balkans: Europeanization or business as usual?
The Thessaloniki Summit of 2003 offered perspective to all countries of the Western Balkans to become members of the European Union once they meet necessary conditions. To facilitate the Western Balkans’ accession, the EU has devised specific instruments in addition to those already part of the enlargement strategy. The reason for tailor-making efforts stems from concerns over stability in the ...
متن کاملDental calculus reveals Mesolithic foragers in the Balkans consumed domesticated plant foods.
Researchers agree that domesticated plants were introduced into southeast Europe from southwest Asia as a part of a Neolithic "package," which included domesticated animals and artifacts typical of farming communities. It is commonly believed that this package reached inland areas of the Balkans by ∼6200 calibrated (cal.) BC or later. Our analysis of the starch record entrapped in dental calcul...
متن کاملDemography of the Early Neolithic Population in Central Balkans: Population Dynamics Reconstruction Using Summed Radiocarbon Probability Distributions
The Central Balkans region is of great importance for understanding the spread of the Neolithic in Europe but the Early Neolithic population dynamics of the region is unknown. In this study we apply the method of summed calibrated probability distributions to a set of published radiocarbon dates from the Republic of Serbia in order to reconstruct population dynamics in the Early Neolithic in th...
متن کاملDimensions of the Balkan Security
“Balkan Peninsula”. “Balkans”. “Balkan people”. “Balkan style”. “Balkanism”. “Balkan federation”. “Balkan folklore”. “Balkan economic zone”. “Balkan orientalism”. “Balkan ethnic minorities”. “Balkan identity”. “Balkan identities”. “Balkan nationalism”. “Balkan policies of the Great Powers”. “Balkan self-(no)confidence”. “Balkan interests”. “Responsibility of the Balkan Governments”. “Balkan pol...
متن کاملTurkey’s Imperial Legacy and the Potential for Conflict in the Balkans
Turkey is the only Eurasian state nearly surrounded by a circle of acute hot and “frozen conflicts”, ranging from low-intensity violence through terrorism to full-fledged wars. The prevailing pattern of inter-communal and interethnic conflicts in the Balkans and on Cyprus has long been different from the patterns of conflict in the rest of Europe and in the Near East. This difference is closely...
متن کامل