Tillage Erosion Model
Tillage Erosion Model is a physical transport and modeling pipeline for predicting soil movement and redistribution caused by tillage operations on sloping land. Developed by soil scientists (Lindstrom, Nelson, Lobb) in the 1990s–2000s, this method quantifies how plowing, disking, and other soil-disturbing implements physically move soil downslope, leading to long-term productivity loss on upper slopes and soil accumulation in valleys.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Lindstrom, M. J., Nelson, W. W., & Schumacher, T. E. (1992). Soil movement by tillage as affected by slope. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 56(4), 1104-1108. · URL
- Lobb, D. A., Kachanoski, R. G., & Miller, M. H. (2003). Tillage translocation and tillage erosion as processes of soil redistribution on agricultural hillslopes. In Soil Erosion Research for the 21st Century: Proceedings of the International Symposium (pp. 15-17). · URL
Curated claims
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Related methods
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