2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.05.015
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Comparison between coastal and inland Karst limestone lowering rates in the northeastern Adriatic Region (Italy and Croatia)

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Cited by 101 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Based on repeated measurement of oblique coordinates, this instrument proved suitable for getting records of coastal retreat, especially on limestones. For a review of destruction rates obtained in different environments on carbonate rocks, see Furlani et al [28]. Apart from the technical constraints of the TMEM, the major limit of this method is that it is difficult to disentangle the contribution of bioerosion from that of all other weathering processes.…”
Section: Review Of Published Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on repeated measurement of oblique coordinates, this instrument proved suitable for getting records of coastal retreat, especially on limestones. For a review of destruction rates obtained in different environments on carbonate rocks, see Furlani et al [28]. Apart from the technical constraints of the TMEM, the major limit of this method is that it is difficult to disentangle the contribution of bioerosion from that of all other weathering processes.…”
Section: Review Of Published Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data regarding cliff retreat can be partly inferred from technical reports or geoengineering papers (BUDETTA et al, 2000). Field measurements of rock erosion rates started after the 1980s, along limited limestone coastal sectors (TORUNSKI, 1979;FURLANI et al, 2009). During the last decade process-based literature increased, but with only a few studies focused on the Mediterranean Sea rocky shores (GOMEZ-PUJOL et al, 2006;ANDRIANI & WALSH, 2007;FURLANI et al, 2009;CHELLI et al, 2010), in particular some aspects, such as tsunamis and deposits of large boulders (MASTRONUZZI, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Field measurements of rock erosion rates started after the 1980s, along limited limestone coastal sectors (TORUNSKI, 1979;FURLANI et al, 2009). During the last decade process-based literature increased, but with only a few studies focused on the Mediterranean Sea rocky shores (GOMEZ-PUJOL et al, 2006;ANDRIANI & WALSH, 2007;FURLANI et al, 2009;CHELLI et al, 2010), in particular some aspects, such as tsunamis and deposits of large boulders (MASTRONUZZI, 2010). Recently, the Geoswim project, which aims at surveying by snorkelling rock coasts in the Mediterranean Sea, added significant amount of geological and geomorphological data (FURLANI et al, 2014a, b;2017a, b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors are aware that there are no relevant data presented in the paper which give evidence that the colour of recent karstic soils is to be linked to the colour of ancient sediments, but their findings support such an approach. Current local studies (Furlani et al 2009;Urban, Rzonca 2009) reinforce such conclusions. In spite of that, heterogeneity of relic karstic soils where autochthonous soil particles and allochthonous soil sediments are unambiguously found together makes generalization difficult.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%