The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks

Since 1936 National Park Service has been charged with preserving Civil War Earthworks while allowing public access. Soil erosion, both natural and human-induced, is a major concern facing the preservation of the earthworks. Currently, the National Park Service is committed to preserving these ear...

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Main Author: Azola, Anthony
Other Authors: Forestry
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31254
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02172001-183436/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-312542020-10-23T06:30:01Z The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks Azola, Anthony Forestry Aust, W. Michael Johnson, James E. Burger, James A. Daniels, W. Lee Soil Erosion Soil Genesis Earthworks Since 1936 National Park Service has been charged with preserving Civil War Earthworks while allowing public access. Soil erosion, both natural and human-induced, is a major concern facing the preservation of the earthworks. Currently, the National Park Service is committed to preserving these earthworks for future generations by determining which maintenance activities cause the least soil erosion. This study was undertaken to determine which management practice; burned, mowed, park-forest, forested, or trimmed, best minimized soil erosion. A secondary objective was to determine how several empirical formulas (e.g. Universal Soil Loss Equation) and one field estimate (e.g. erosion pins) compared soil erosion trends for the 5 treatments. A third objective of this study was to gather information regarding the soil development which has occurred during the 135 + years since the earthworks were constructed. Earthworks managed by prescribed burning suffered the greatest erosion rates while the forested earthworks eroded the least. The trimmed and mowed management regimes were not significantly different and would provide adequate erosion protection while the forested treatment had significantly less erosion. Based on the empirical models, erosion was primarily a function of ground cover; on the other hand, rain intensity was highly influential for erosion as measured by the erosion pins. All of the erosion estimation methods concurred that the burned treatment should be avoided due to the high erosion rates while the erosion pins indicated that the park-forest treatment could potentially have erosion problems as well. Soil profile descriptions from the earthworks revealed that A horizon depths on the earthworks were not significantly different then the A horizons found on the relatively undisturbed adjacent forest floor and that subsurface soil structure has begun to develop on earthwork soils. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:31:50Z 2014-03-14T20:31:50Z 2001-02-01 2001-02-17 2002-02-26 2001-02-26 Thesis etd-02172001-183436 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31254 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02172001-183436/ azola.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Soil Erosion
Soil Genesis
Earthworks
spellingShingle Soil Erosion
Soil Genesis
Earthworks
Azola, Anthony
The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
description Since 1936 National Park Service has been charged with preserving Civil War Earthworks while allowing public access. Soil erosion, both natural and human-induced, is a major concern facing the preservation of the earthworks. Currently, the National Park Service is committed to preserving these earthworks for future generations by determining which maintenance activities cause the least soil erosion. This study was undertaken to determine which management practice; burned, mowed, park-forest, forested, or trimmed, best minimized soil erosion. A secondary objective was to determine how several empirical formulas (e.g. Universal Soil Loss Equation) and one field estimate (e.g. erosion pins) compared soil erosion trends for the 5 treatments. A third objective of this study was to gather information regarding the soil development which has occurred during the 135 + years since the earthworks were constructed. Earthworks managed by prescribed burning suffered the greatest erosion rates while the forested earthworks eroded the least. The trimmed and mowed management regimes were not significantly different and would provide adequate erosion protection while the forested treatment had significantly less erosion. Based on the empirical models, erosion was primarily a function of ground cover; on the other hand, rain intensity was highly influential for erosion as measured by the erosion pins. All of the erosion estimation methods concurred that the burned treatment should be avoided due to the high erosion rates while the erosion pins indicated that the park-forest treatment could potentially have erosion problems as well. Soil profile descriptions from the earthworks revealed that A horizon depths on the earthworks were not significantly different then the A horizons found on the relatively undisturbed adjacent forest floor and that subsurface soil structure has begun to develop on earthwork soils. === Master of Science
author2 Forestry
author_facet Forestry
Azola, Anthony
author Azola, Anthony
author_sort Azola, Anthony
title The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
title_short The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
title_full The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
title_fullStr The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Management on Erosion of Civil War Battlefield Earthworks
title_sort effect of management on erosion of civil war battlefield earthworks
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31254
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02172001-183436/
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