Data underlying the publication: The importance of marshes providing soil stabilization to resist fast-flow erosion in case of a dike breach

doi:10.4121/15104343.v1
The doi above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future. For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
doi: 10.4121/15104343
Datacite citation style:
Marin Diaz, Beatriz; Govers, Laura L.; van der Wal, Daphne; Olff, Han; J. Bouma, Tjeerd (2022): Data underlying the publication: The importance of marshes providing soil stabilization to resist fast-flow erosion in case of a dike breach. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/15104343.v1
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite
Dataset
This dataset contains the data obtained and utilized for the manuscript: The importance of marshes providing soil stabilization to resist fast-flow erosion in case of a dike breach. The aim was to quantify the topsoil erosion resistance from marshes and bare tidal flats with different soil types to understand the extent to which they can help reduce breach depth in case of a dike breach during a storm. Intact soil samples were collected from eleven locations in the Netherlands at different tidal elevations and then exposed for three hours to 2.3 m s-1 currents in a flow flume. The topsoil erosion was measured for each sample. The dataset includes 1) a file with the belowground vegetation properties, sediment properties and erosion values for each soil sample; 2) a file with soil stability data from artificial cracks made in some of the samples at the end of the topsoil erosion experiment; and 3) the code for the data analysis in R.
history
  • 2022-04-01 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
R file and csv
organizations
NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Department of Estuarine and Delta Systems and Utrecht University;

University of Groningen , Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, Community and Conservation Ecology Group

DATA

files (4)