Introduction to the Discipline of Geomorphology - Kenneth J.
Gregory and Andrew Goudie
PART ONE: FOUNDATION AND RELEVANCE
Geomorphology: Its Early History - Andrew Goudie
The Nature of Explanation in Geomorphology - Keith Richards and
Nicholas J. Clifford
The Role and Character of Theory in Geomorphology - Bruce L. Rhoads
and Colin E. Thorn
Geomorphology in Environmental Management - Peter W. Downs and
Derek B. Booth
Geomorphology and Society - Mathias Kondolf and Hervé Piégay
PART TWO: TECHNIQUES AND APPROACHES
Observations and Experiments - Michael Church
Geomorphological Mapping - Mike J. Smith and Colin F. Pain
The Significance of Models in Geomorphology: From Concepts to
Experiments - Nicholas A. Odoni and Stuart N. Lane
Process and Form - Richard Huggett
Dating Surfaces and Sediments - Tony G. Brown
Remote Sensing in Geomorphology - Tom G. Farr
Geographic Information Systems in Geomorphology - Takashi Oguchi
and Thad A. Wasklewicz
Biogeomorphology - Heather Viles
Human Activity and Geomorphology - Dénes Lóczy and László S to
PART THREE: PROCESS AND ENVIRONMENTS
The Evolution of Regolith - Graham Taylor
Rock Surface and Weathering: Process and Form - David A. Robinson
and Cherith A. Moses
Fluids, Flows and Fluxes in Geomorphology - André G. Roy and Hélène
Lamarre
Sediment Transport and Deposition - Jeff Warburton
Hillslopes - David Petley
Riverine Environments - Jim Pizzuto
Glacial Geomorphology - John Menzies
Periglacial Environments - Hugh French
Coastal Environments - Colin D. Woodroffe, Peter J. Cowell, Mark E.
Dickson
Aeolian Environments - Joanna E. Bullard
Tropical Environments - Michael Thomas and Vishwas Kale
Geomorphology Underground: The Study of Karst and Karst Processes -
D. C. Ford, and P. W. Williams,
PART FOUR: ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Landscape Evolution and Tectonics - Paul Bishop
Interpreting Quaternary Environments - Anne Mather
Environmental Change - Martin Williams
Disturbance and Responses in Geomorphic Systems - Jonathan D.
Phillips
PART FIVE: CONCLUSION
Challenges and Perspectives - Mike Crozier, P. Bierman, Andreas
Lang and Victor R. Baker
Conclusion - Kenneth J. Gregory and Andrew Goudie
Ken Gregory obtained his BSc, PhD and DSc from the University of
London, was made CBE in 2007 for services to geography and higher
education, and is currently President of the British Society for
Geomorphology. Research interests include river channel change and
management, palaeohydrology and the development of physical
geography, and he has written more than 140 papers, authored and
edited 30 books including The Earth’s Land Surface (2010) and The
SAGE Handbook of Geomorphology (2011). He has 3 Honorary degrees,
and received the Founder’s Medal of the Royal Geographical Society
(1993), the Linton award of the BGRG (1999), and the Geographical
medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society (2000).
Andrew Goudie is Professor of Geography at the University of Oxford
and President of the British Institute in Eastern
Africa.
Geomorphology has been substantially transformed over the past
couple of decades and it is fitting that the peak international
body should generate a comprehensive description at this time. The
book provides an overview of the whole discipline, instructive to
those insiders who may have become absorbed in one of its many
branches as well as to those outside the discipline, bringing them
up to date on the state of geomorphology in the early 21st
century
Geographical Research [The SAGE Handbook of Geomorphology is] aimed
primarily at academics, researchers and postgraduate students...
The handbook considered here comprises 33 chapters written and
co-written by 49 contributors from around the world, but
predominantly from North America, the UK and Australia. It is
edited by two eminent and committed British geomorphologists with
long careers and impeccable credentials for the task... [The SAGE
Handbook of Geomorphology] provides excellent up-to-date summaries
of the current state of knowledge and reading lists for different
areas of the subject, as well as succinct reviews of different
stages of the historical development of the discipline.
Richard A Shakesby
Swansea University
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