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The palaeochannel record in the Trent Valley UK: contributions towards cultural heritage management
Steve Baker
Table of Contents
Summary
Table of Contents
List of Figures
1 Background
1.1
The Trent Valley
1.1.1 Location and character
1.1.2 The Pleistocene and Holocene evolution of the Trent Valley
1.1.3 Human landscapes and the palaeochannel resource
1.2
Cultural resource management and the palaeochannel record
1.3
Research aims and rationale
2 Mapping Palaeochannels at the Catchment Scale: methodological considerations
2.1
Techniques for mapping fluvial geomorphology
2.2
'Surface-visible' palaeochannels and their potential date range
2.3
The palaeochannel survey methodology
2.3.1 The survey area
2.3.2 Photographic sources
2.3.3 Digital processing of images
2.3.4 Palaeochannel 'forms'
2.3.5 Other sources of data
2.3.6 Text attributes
3 Palaeochannel Data
4 Results and Discussion
4.1
Quantitative summary
4.1.1 Raw numbers
4.1.2 Frequency of palaeochannel 'forms'
4.1.3 Variations in palaeochannel density
4.2
Spatial variation, preservation and visibility
4.2.1 The upland zone
4.2.2 The Middle Trent Valley
4.2.3 The Lower Trent Valley
4.3
The implications of changing land-use
5
Conclusions
5.1 Advantages of the survey methodology
5.2 Undated channels: problems and potential
5.3 Further work
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Glossary
Archive and Photographic Sources
Related digital archive
(hosted by ADS)
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