Authors
Panos Panagos, Cristiano Ballabio, Pasquale Borrelli, Katrin Meusburger, Andreas Klik, Svetla Rousseva, Melita Perčec Tadić, Silas Michaelides, Michaela Hrabalíková, Preben Olsen, Juha Aalto, Mónika Lakatos, Anna Rymszewicz, Alexandru Dumitrescu, Santiago Beguería, Christine Alewell
Publication date
2015/4/1
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
Volume
511
Pages
801-814
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Rainfall is one the main drivers of soil erosion. The erosive force of rainfall is expressed as rainfall erosivity. Rainfall erosivity considers the rainfall amount and intensity, and is most commonly expressed as the R-factor in the USLE model and its revised version, RUSLE. At national and continental levels, the scarce availability of data obliges soil erosion modellers to estimate this factor based on rainfall data with only low temporal resolution (daily, monthly, annual averages). The purpose of this study is to assess rainfall erosivity in Europe in the form of the RUSLE R-factor, based on the best available datasets. Data have been collected from 1541 precipitation stations in all European Union (EU) Member States and Switzerland, with temporal resolutions of 5 to 60 min. The R-factor values calculated from precipitation data of different temporal resolutions were normalised to R-factor values with temporal resolutions of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Panagos, C Ballabio, P Borrelli, K Meusburger, A Klik… - Science of the Total Environment, 2015