„LAND T
land cover,
owledge to
>rstand the
ve soils as
The higher
defined in
wn in the
and more
d more and
eterminants
| properties
ng detail
recognizes
rm units. It
] finds its
jn morpho-
omposition.
logic terms
tailed geo-
ndform is
e basis of a
rial
't is a small
set at about
| terms of
aterials. It
factors and
nal that the
boundary
led unit of
PERMEABLE
LLY [DEEP SOILS
AGGREGATION
DISAGGREGATION
‘|
ierarchy :
legend are
used to
Is (HsC in
dy of the
gure 2). In
landforms
E DEPOSITIONAL LANDFORMS
~ HaD f | P PIEDMONT
BEN \ f BZ | Pg gravitational
Irrigated tree crops
Rainfed tree crops
EN Semi-natural vegetation
EN Annual crops
Figure 4.
PgC conglomerate blocks + flows over marls
PgM marl with colluvial surface transport
Pf fluvial (Quaternary)
Pfo old to very old strongly incised
Pfy young, not to slightly incised
R RIVER FLATS / TERRACES (QUATERNARY)
Rf fluvial
RfX limestone-rich and coarse
EROSIONAL LANDFORMS
M HILLY TO MOUNTAINOUS (HARD ROCKS)
Mm metamorphic rocks (Cambrian)
MmG gneiss
Mms schist and shale
Mu ultramafic rocks
MuT serpentinite
Mh hard sedimentary rocks (Pliocene, Miocene)
MhC conglomerate
H HILLS (SOFT ROCKS)
Hs ridges and hills in soft sedimentary rocks
(Flysch: mainly Tertiary)
HsZ marl and sandstone ridges
HsD fluvial-capped (calcareous conglomerate)
hills with adjacent slopes (Piedmont
remnants: Pliocene to Pleistocene)
HsU minor valleys and bottom lands with marl and
limestone-rich deposits
Irrigated tree crops
Rainfed tree crops
EN Semi-natural vegetation
EN Annua! crops
Figure 5.
Intemational Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Part 7, Budapest, 1998 345