56286 - Geomorphology

Academic Year 2013/2014

  • Docente: Stefano Cremonini
  • Credits: 6
  • SSD: GEO/04
  • Language: Italian
  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Natural Sciences (cod. 8016)

Learning outcomes

The students will learn to understand the geomorphic processes and  natural forms and to make a preliminary geomorphological map.

Course contents

26 (20 front+6 Exer)complete micromodules (2 hours each) concerning:

1) fields of study and concepts; 2) vertical mobility in the crustal environment; 3) weathering processes; 4-5) pedology; (Exer 1) technical cartography; 6) hydrology; 7)hydrographic network and basin and river-bed parameters; (Exer 2) Quantitative parameters; Processes and Forms (PF) concerning the following environments: 8) slope; 9) fluvial; 10) lacustrine;11) littoral; 12) eolian; 13) glacial; 14) periglacial; 15) karstic; 16) volcanic; 17) submarine; 18) structural geomorphology; 19) anthropogeomorphology; 20) geomorphological mapping rudiments; (Exer.3-4) personal map analysis; (Exer.5) Rudiments of  photographic palimpsest interpretation; (Exer. 6) Introduction to the stereoscopic use of  the aerial photo-pair.           

Readings/Bibliography

In addition to the personal notes and to class hand-outs (within the limits set by the copyright laws) at least one of the subsequent handbooks (according  to  the language of preference) is advisable:

1) Castiglioni G.B., Geomorfologia, UTET, 1999

2) Panizza M. Geomorfologia, Pitagora 1995

3)Ciccacci S. Le forme del rilievo: atlante illustrato di geomorfologia, Mondatori 2010.

4) Bartolini C. , I fattori geologici delle forme del rilievo, Pitagora  1992.

5) Dramis F., Bisci C., Cartografia geomorfologica, Pitagora 1998

6) Ciabatti M., Elementi di Idrologia, Patron 1977

7)Sauro U. et al.,  Dalla carta topografica al paesaggio. ZetaBeta 2005.

8) Marinelli O., Atlante dei tipi geografici, IGM.I. (ristampa 2002).

9) Pranzini E., La forma delle coste. Zanichelli 2004.

10) Carraro F., Geologia del Quaternario, Flaccovio, 2012

11) Dainelli N., Fotointerpretazione: l'osservazione della Terra. Flaccovio, 2011

12) Rivard L., Integration of satellite and photo Geomorphology for preliminary Terrain Evaluation: visual interpretation techniques. Springer , Berlin , 2011.

Foreign textbooks:

 13) Coque R., Géomorphologie, Colin Editeur, 2000.

14) Summerfield M.,  Global Geomorphology, Longmann 1991.

15) Campy M., Macaire J.-J., Geologie de la surface, Dunod 2003.

16) Gutierrez E. M., Geomorfologia, Pearson-Prentice Hall, Madrid 2008.

17)  Dewolf Y., Bourrié G. , Les formations superficielles, Ellipses, Paris 2008.

18) Anderson R.S., Anderson S.P., Geomorphology : the mechanics and chemistry of

        landscapes, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2010, 654 pp. (trattazione  di taglio più

         matematico).

19) Jay Melosh  H., 2011, Planetary surface processes, Cambridge University Press

20) Smith  M. J., Paron P., Griffith J. S, 2011,  Geomorphological mapping, Elsevier,

       Oxford.

 If relevant, also:

21) Casati P., Pace F., Scienze della Terra , vol 2° Città Studi 1996 (solo argomenti trattati a lezione); (only topics dealt with at lesson)

22) Perego S., Appunti di Cartografia ad uso degli studenti di Scienze geologiche e

         Naturali ecc., Santa Croce , Parma 1997 (solo per gli studenti di corsi diversi da

         Scienze Naturali).  (Only for students coming from courses other than Natural Sciences)

 

 



Teaching methods

Oral  lessons and exercises in class. The teacher will drive the students (as a whole class as well as individuals) through each step of the course towards the correct reading and interpretation of  the geomorphological setting and related stratigraphic details.

Assessment methods

The final examination will be an oral test but it focuses on a practical approach. Indeed, each student is asked to discuss a previously drawn geomorphological interpretation of a topographical sheet already chosen during the course (a list of maps is suggested by the teacher during the first lesson of the course). The map drawing is performed by the student  partly during the class-exercises and partly as final, personal refinement. This analytical discussion will allow for a deepening of all the topics characterizing the course and consequently for determining the final mark.

Teaching tools

Light-board,slide projector ,rocks and soils samples, cartography,   aerial photo-pairs,   PPT presentations.

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Links to further information

http://www.unibo.it/SitoWebDocente/default.htm?upn=stefano.cremonini%40unibo.it&TabControl1=TabLinkhttp://corsi.unibo.it/Laurea/ScienzeNatur

Office hours

See the website of Stefano Cremonini