The chronological list shows current publications from the University of applied sciences Weihenstephan-Triesdorf. The Centre for Research and Knowledge Transfer (ZFW) is responsible for this.
8 Results
Prof. Dr. Dominikus Gregor Kittemann
Schlüsselfaktoren für eine erfolgreiche Kernobstlagerung (2018) Lagertagung in Graz, 09.07.2018 .
Dr. Luitfred Kissoly,
Prof. Dr. Anja Faße,
Prof. Dr. Ulrike Grote
Permissions: Open Access
Permissions: Peer Reviewed
Implications of Smallholder Farm Production Diversity for Household Food Consumption Diversity: Insights from Diverse Agro-Ecological and Market Access Contexts in Rural Tanzania (2018) Horticulturae 4 (3), S. 1-23.
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae4030014
Christopher König,
Prof. Dr. Christoph Moning,
Felix Weiß
Toskana des Sauerlandes: Die Medebacher Bucht in Nordrhein-Westfalen (2018) Der Falke 2018 (7), S. 26-30.
Lehr- und Versuchsbetrieb Gladbacherhof Feldtag „hochwertiges Eiweiß vom eigenen Feld“ (2018) Vorstellung der Sorten- und Düngungsversuche, gemeinsam mit den Projektpartnern .
Lehr- und Versuchsbetrieb Gladbacherhof Feldtag „hochwertiges Eiweiß vom eigenen Feld“ (2018) Posterausstellung im Rahmen des Feldtages am 04. Juli 2018 .
Gisela Westermeier
Falscher Mehltau an annuellen und staudigen Sonnenblumen (2018) Gartenpraxis 44 (7), S. 76-77.
Prof. Dr. Niall Palfreyman,
Janice Miller-Young
What is a cognizing subject? Construction, autonomy and original causation (2018) Constructivist Foundations 13 (3), S. 362-373.
Georg Kaufmann,
Douchko Romanov,
Thomas Tippelt,
Prof. Dr. Thomas Vienken,
Ulrike Werban,
Prof. Dr. Peter Dietrich,
Franziska Mai,
Frank Börner
Münsterdorf is a small village in the north of Hamburg, located along the northern rim of a salt diapir. The Permian rocks are uplifted and overlying rocks such as the Cretaceous limestone, normally at several kilometers depth, have been pushed close to the surface. In Münsterdorf, the Cretaceous limestone can be found at around 20 m depth, and about 2 km further south, Cretaceous limestones are quarried in a large open-pit mine.Since 2004, collapse sinkholes have formed on a sports field in Münsterdorf, with a frequency of about 1 every two years, about 3–5 m in diameter and 3–5 m deep. The collapse sinkholes do not reach the underlying limestone, but seem to be related to accelerated dissolution in that formation. Above the Cretaceous limestone, Quaternary gravels and glacial tills provide a non-soluble, but permeable and heterogeneous cover of about 20 m thickness.We have mapped the sports field and its vicinity with gravity (GRAV), electrical resistivity imaging (ERI), and ground-penetrating radar (GPR). The ERI profiles indicate a significant change in the surface layer, from thin and irregular in the northern part to thicker and more homogeneous in the southern part of the sports field. GPR profiles confirm this result.We numerically model the evolution of flow and porosity in the Cretaceous limestone to estimate the evolution time of subsurface voids in the limestone, and we discuss the potential cause of the sinkhole formation and its sudden onset in light of the hydraulic boundary conditions.
More
Maintenance of the publication pages
Gerhard Radlmayr
Knowledge Transfer and Research Communication Officer
We use cookies. Some are necessary for the website to function, others help us to improve the website. To meet our own data protection requirements, we only collect anonymised user data with "Matomo". To make our website more appealing to you, we also integrate external content from our social media channels.