Peat

Producción científica

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Resumen

Peat is a soil consisting of semi-decomposed plant material which accumulates in situ as a result of waterlogging. The percentage of mineral matter contained within such soils can vary from as little as 2% by weight to as much as 30%, though even this upper limit is more an agreed convention than any strict biological threshold. Peat can be generated from a wide range of plant materials under various forms of waterlogging. The orderly nature of peat layers, which may attain depths of 40 m or more and which may have accumulated over periods as long as 100,000 years, offer much of interest to palaeobotanists and archaeologists, particularly as the processes which result in the preservation of plant material also preserve other objects, such as human remains. The carbon stored in the world's peatlands exceeds that which is stored in all the world's vegetation.

Idioma originalEnglish
Título de la publicación alojadaThe Wetland Book II
Subtítulo de la publicación alojadaDistribution, Description, and Conservation
EditorialSpringer Nature
Páginas245-250
Número de páginas6
Volumen1
ISBN (versión digital)9789400740013
ISBN (versión impresa)9789400740006
DOI
EstadoPublished - 1 ene 2018

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