Review by: Richard P. Smith
This second edition of Tectonic Geomorphology (Burbank and Anderson, 2012) is written only a little more than a decade after the first edition, but the changes are substantial: 500 new references, most published in the last decade, and 150 new illustrations have been added. Many recent advances and developments encouraged the writing of the new edition: increased availability of digital topography and Earth imagery (Google Earth, for example), widespread application of light detection and ranging (LiDAR) mapping, more refined techniques of measuring Earth deformation (interferometric synthetic aperture radar [InSAR], continuous global positioning system...
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