• DocumentCode
    2913734
  • Title

    Quantitative Evaluation of Anthropogenic Impacts during the Course of Sandy Desertification in Arid Inland River Basin of Northwestern China: The Case of Zhangye Region

  • Author

    Shanzhong Qi ; Guiduo Shang ; Xuexia Zhang

  • Author_Institution
    Coll. of Population, Shandong Normal Univ., Jinan, China
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    25-28 March 2011
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    3
  • Abstract
    Sandy desertification is defined land degradation characterized by wind erosion mainly resulted from the excessive human activities in arid, semiarid and part of sub-humid regions in northern China, especially in the oasis zone distributed along inland rivers or in the lower reaches of inland rivers in northwestern China. During the sandy desertification anthropogenic factors play an important role and are one of key issues, thereby indicating that anthropogenic factors are the important reason of sandy desertification. The objective of this contribution is quantitatively assessed the impacts of anthropogenic influences on sandy desertification from another new aspect based socioeconomic and meteorological data collected in the Zhangye Region of Gansu Province, located in the middle reaches of Heihe River Basin of arid northwestern China, which could provide theoretical basis for the government to regulate human economic activity.
  • Keywords
    erosion; geomorphology; rivers; sand; wind; Gansu Province; Heihe River Basin; Zhangye Region; anthropogenic impact evaluation; arid inland river basin; human economic activity; land degradation characterization; meteorological data collection; northwestern China; oasis zone distribution; sandy desertification process; socioeconomic data collection; subhumid region; wind erosion; Economics; Humans; Rivers; Soil; Synchronous digital hierarchy; Temperature; Water conservation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Power and Energy Engineering Conference (APPEEC), 2011 Asia-Pacific
  • Conference_Location
    Wuhan
  • ISSN
    2157-4839
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-6253-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/APPEEC.2011.5747673
  • Filename
    5747673