“…However, if some of this redistributed SOC-rich sediment leaves the landscape unit, it would result in a loss of the transported SOC (across land unit borders) to the water and adjacent landscape by surface runoff or wind erosion or to the atmosphere as CO 2 during the oxidation process, which no longer can be counted as sequestered SOC. Several researchers (Gennadiyev et al 2010;Golosov et al 2011;Olson et al 2011Olson et al , 2012Olson et al , 2013aOlson et al , 2013b) measured the SOC in agricultural landscape units with both eroding and depositional sites. The amount of SOC-rich sediment lost during the erosion process to a depositional unit can be quantified (Kreznor et al 1989(Kreznor et al , 1990(Kreznor et al , 1992Jones and Olson 1990) using the presence of fly ash.…”