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Dive into the research topics where Carol Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Carol Smith.


Soil Research | 2017

Fabric of soil derived from parna and the riddle of transported pellets

Stephen R. Cattle; Carol Smith

It is generally accepted that large areas of southern New South Wales (NSW) and northern Victoria are mantled by soils derived from clayey loess deposits called parna. These parna deposits are believed to have formed during arid phases of the Pleistocene and the mineral constituents are assumed to have been transported as silt- and fine sand-sized pellets of calcareous clay, with some companion quartz grains of a similar size. A common property of parna-derived soils is subplasticity, where the apparent field texture grade becomes more clayey with increasing mechanical working of the bolus. This propensity for subplastic behaviour suggests that parna-derived soils contain stable silt- and fine sand-sized pellets of clay, yet there has been little direct micromorphological evidence of these pellets ever published. In the present study, thin section samples from several parna type-sites in southern NSW were examined micromorphologically to reveal the presence of very well size-sorted quartz grain populations (companion grains) and identifiable prolate clay aggregations of a similar silt to fine sand size. These prolate pellets, comprised of quartz, illite, kaolinite and chlorite, have a very distinctive mosaic-speckled b-fabric and are more widely distributed throughout the soil than the similarly sized and shaped faunal faecal pellets. Where these pelletal aggregations are not evident, such as in the deeper parna deposits, abundant illuviation features suggest that clay particles deposited within the parna, whether as pellets or coatings on grains, have subsequently undergone considerable weathering and a range of pedogenic processes.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2012

Abiotic processes dominate CO2 fluxes in Antarctic soils

Fiona L. Shanhun; Peter C. Almond; Tim J. Clough; Carol Smith


Terra Nova | 2017

When the earth blisters: Exploring recurrent liquefaction features in the coastal system of Christchurch, New Zealand

Monica Giona Bucci; Peter C. Almond; Pilar Villamor; William Ries; Carol Smith; Martitia P. Tuttle


Archive | 2013

Development and testing indicators of restoration success: Punakaiki coastal restoration project

J. Hahner; Nicholas M. Dickinson; Carol Smith; Stephane Boyer; A. Chassagneux; J. Segrestin; Ross Carter-Brown; Hongtao Zhong; Cathy Mountier


Engineering Geology | 2018

Associations between sediment architecture and liquefaction susceptibility in fluvial settings: The 2010–2011 Canterbury Earthquake Sequence, New Zealand

M. Giona Bucci; Pilar Villamor; Peter C. Almond; Martitia P. Tuttle; Mark Stringer; William Ries; Carol Smith; M. Hodge; Matt Watson


Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2017

Mānuka (Leptospermum scoparium) roots forage biosolids in low fertility soil

Flavia V.P. Reis; María Jesús Gutiérrez-Ginés; Carol Smith; Niklas J. Lehto; Brett Robinson


Applied Soil Ecology | 2017

Seabird guano and phosphorus fractionation in a rhizosphere with earthworms

Hongtao Zhong; Young-Nam Kim; Carol Smith; Brett Robinson; Nicholas M. Dickinson


Sedimentology | 2018

Micromorphological analysis of liquefaction features in alluvial and coastal environments of Christchurch, New Zealand

Monica Giona Bucci; Carol Smith; Peter C. Almond; Pilar Villamor; Martitia P. Tuttle


Sedimentary Geology | 2018

Controls on patterns of liquefaction in a coastal dune environment, Christchurch, New Zealand

Monica Giona Bucci; Peter C. Almond; Pilar Villamor; Martitia P. Tuttle; Mark Stringer; Carol Smith; William Ries; Joanne Bourgeois; Remedy Loame; Jamie Howarth; Matt Watson


Archive | 2018

Restoration research (Punakiki Coastal Restoration Project: 2014-2016)

J. Esperchuetz; Michael H. Bowie; Carol Smith; Michael R. Abbott; Nicholas M. Dickinson

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Mark Stringer

University of Canterbury

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Stephane Boyer

Unitec Institute of Technology

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