01201nam a22002771i 450099100204193970753620040120143817.0040407s2001 it |||||||||||||||||eng b12861959-39ule_instARCHE-084157ExLDip.to Scienze StoricheitaA.t.i. Arché s.c.r.l. Pandora Sicilia s.r.l.322Brau, Rinaldo118767Participation incentives and the design of voluntary agreements /Rinaldo Brau, Carlo Carraro and Giulio GolfettoMilano :Fondazione ENI Enrico Mattei,20011 v. ;21 cmNote di lavoro della Fondazione ENI Enrico Mattei ;19.2001Partecipazione politicaCarraro, Carloauthorhttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut89119Golfetto, Giulio.b1286195902-04-1416-04-04991002041939707536LE009 GEOG.COLL.14H/1912009000317390le009-E0.00-l- 00000.i1342243116-04-04Participation incentives and the design of voluntary agreements1448513UNISALENTOle00916-04-04ma -engit 0105345nam 2200661Ia 450 991014131430332120230801221937.01-280-58745-897866136172861-4443-6109-01-4443-6106-6(CKB)2670000000161895(EBL)879012(OCoLC)782918758(SSID)ssj0000641441(PQKBManifestationID)11404086(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000641441(PQKBWorkID)10628649(PQKB)10794030(MiAaPQ)EBC879012(Au-PeEL)EBL879012(CaPaEBR)ebr10546569(CaONFJC)MIL361728(EXLCZ)99267000000016189520111206d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSpeleothem science[electronic resource] from process to past environments /Ian J. Fairchild and Andy BakerChichester, West Sussex ;Hoboken, N.J. Wiley-Blackwell20121 online resource (464 p.)Blackwell Quaternary Geoscience SeriesDescription based upon print version of record.1-4051-9620-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.Speleothem Science; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgements; I: Scientific and geologica lcontext; CHAPTER 1: Introduction to speleothems and systems; 1.1 What is all the fuss about?; 1.1.1 What types of speleothem areuseful for generating climate archives?; 1.1.2 Where do speleothems occur?; 1.1.3 How do they form?; 1.1.4 How do we date them?; 1.1.5 What are the proxies for past environments and climates?; 1.1.6 How do speleothems compare with other archives?; 1.1.7 What next for speleothem science?; 1.2 How is this book organized?; 1.3 Concepts and approaches of system scienceBox 1.1 Box models and feedback1.4 The speleothem factory within the karst system; 1.4.1 Long-term change; 1.4.2 Annual-scale behaviour; 1.4.3 Decadal- to multi-millennial-scale changes; CHAPTER 2: Carbonate and karst cave geology; 2.1 Carbonates in the Earth system over geological time; Heat transferred from the rock; 2.2 Lithologies of carbonate hostrocks; 2.2.1 Carbonate facies; 2.2.2 The architecture of carbonate host rocks: sequence stratigraphy; 2.2.3 Impure and geologically complex host rocks; 2.2.4 Carbonate porosity; 2.3 Carbonate diagenesis and eogenetic karst2.3.1 Early diagenesis in marine waters and brines2.3.2 Vadose diagenetic processes; 2.3.3 Meteoric phreatic diagenesis; 2.3.4 Eogenetic karst development; 2.3.5 Burial diagenesis; 2.4 Speleogenesis in mesogenetic and telogenetic karst (with contributions from John Gunn and David J Lowe); 2.4.1 Chronologies of cavedevelopment; 2.4.2 Geometry of cave passages and systems; 2.4.3 Localization of caves: the inception horizon hypothesis; 2.4.4 Mesogenetic caves; 2.4.5 Modelling the development of conduits and networks; 2.5 Cave infilling; 2.5.1 Mechanisms of cave infill and their relative power2.5.2 Dating the infills2.5.3 Physical sedimentology; 2.5.4 Archaeological issues; 2.5.5 The long-term prognosis; 2.6 Conclusion; CHAPTER 3: Surface environments: climate, soil and vegetation; 3.1 The modern climate system; 3.1.1 The global energy budget; 3.1.2 Global patterns of temperature, rainfall and evapotranspiration; 3.1.3 The general circulation of the atmosphere; 3.1.4 Ocean circulation and land-ocean interactions; Box 3.1 Climate indices; Box 3.2 Back trajectory analysis; 3.2 Water isotopes in the atmosphere3.2.1 Variation in stable isotopes owing to evaporation and Rayleigh condensation3.2.2 Other factors responsible for variations in isotopic composition; 3.2.3 Isotopic variations in space within the annual cycle; 3.2.4 Inter-annual isotopic variations; 3.3 Soils of karst regions; 3.3.1 Processes of soil formation; 3.3.2 Soil development through time; 3.3.3 Concluding views on karst soils; 3.4 Vegetation of karst regions; 3.5 Synthesis: inputsto the incubator; II: Transfer processes in karst; CHAPTER 4: The speleothem incubator; 4.1 Introduction to speleophysiologySpeleothems (mineral deposits that formed in caves) are currently giving us some of the most exciting insights into environments and climates during the Pleistocene ice ages and the subsequent Holocene rise of civilizations. The book applies system science to Quaternary environments in a new and rigorous way and gives holistic explanations the relations between the properties of speleothems and the climatic and cave setting in which they are found. It is designed as the ideal companion to someone embarking on speleothem research and, since the underlying science is very broad, it will also beBlackwell Quaternary Geoscience SeriesSpeleothemsPaleoclimatologySpeleothems.Paleoclimatology.551.44/7Fairchild Ian J(Ian John)896982Baker Andy1968-896983MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910141314303321Speleothem science2004219UNINA