Landform, Soils and Erosion in the North-Eastern Irangi Hills, Kondoa, Tanzania
Loading...
Date
1992
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
The northern eastern Iringa Hills of the Kondoa District, Tanzania are severely affected by soil erosion with consequent land degradation caused by the loss of productive soil, gullying, sand deposition on lower slopes, and rapid siltation of lakes. Major changes in land surface morphology and soil characteristics have drasticallyaltered the pattern of cultivation and settlement. A knowledge of soil and environmental conditions that existed prior to the phase of modern accelerated erosion in fundamental to the accurate assessment of land degradation processes, the extent of soil erosion and sedimentation, and the degree and sustainability of land recovery. This paper integrated the results of recent field-based geomorphological, pedological, and sedimentological studies in the Haubi and Mwisanga catchments. Landform, soil toposequences and recent colluvial and alluvial deposits are described in relation to erosion features, the dynamics vegetation/land use changes and the development of Lake Haubi. Modification of the pre-existing soil landscape by accelerated erosional and depositional process is discussed.
Description
Full text available at http://www.jstor.org/stable/521285?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
Keywords
Geochronological, pedologica, sedimentological, hills, cultivation, soil erosion
Citation
Payton, R. W., C. Christiansson, E. K. Shishira, P. Yanda, and M. G. Eriksson. 1992. “Landform, Soils and Erosion in the North-eastern Irangi Hills, Kondoa, Tanzania”. Geografiska Annaler. Series A, Physical Geography 74 (2/3). [Wiley, Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography]: 65–79. doi:10.2307/521285.