- Argues that knowledge of geomorphological processes is fundamental to understanding the ways in which carbon is stored and recycled in the terrestrial environment
- Integrates classical geomorphological theory with understanding of microbial processes controlling the decomposition of organic matter
- Develops an interdisciplinary research agenda for the analysis of the terrestrial carbon cycle
- Informed by work in ecology, microbiology and biogeochemistry, in order to analyse spatial and temporal patterns of terrestrial carbon cycling at the landscape scale
- Considers the ways in which, as Humanity enters the Anthropocene, the application of this science has the potential to manage the terrestrial carbon cycle to limit increases in atmospheric carbon