Archaeopedology and chronostratigraphy of colluvial deposits as a proxy for regional land use history (Baar, southwest Germany)
Autor: | Jessica Henkner, Markus Fuchs, Thomas Scholten, Sean S. Downey, Jan J. Ahlrichs, Sandra Teuber, Thomas Knopf, Peter Kühn, Bruce R. James |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
010506 paleontology
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Thermoluminescence dating Land use Geoarchaeology 01 natural sciences law.invention Sedimentary depositional environment law Iron Age Physical geography Radiocarbon dating Chronostratigraphy Geomorphology Geology 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Earth-Surface Processes Colluvium |
Zdroj: | CATENA. 155:93-113 |
ISSN: | 0341-8162 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.catena.2017.03.005 |
Popis: | Soils are the basis of our food production, supplying plants with nutrients and water. Farming leaves traces in the soil because cultivation can cause soil erosion. One result is the formation of colluvial deposits, which can be used as geoarchives of past human impacts on their terrestrial environment. The present study combines pedological and archaeological knowledge with chronostratigraphic analyses to infer deposition phases of colluvial material, thereby allowing the reconstruction of past land use and settlement activities in the Baar region, SW Germany. Local colluvial signals are interpreted as a regional proxy for increased soil erosion and colluviation. On the Baar, seven main deposition phases of colluvial material can be detected by 28 luminescence dates and 41 radiocarbon ages distributed through 26 soil profiles. Our results indicate increased colluviation in the younger Neolithic (~ 3800 BCE), the early to middle Bronze Age (~ 1550 BCE), the Iron Age (~ 500 BCE), the Roman Empire (~ 100 CE) and from the high Middle Ages onwards (> 1200 CE, 1300 CE, 1600 CE). These dates and record of colluviation complement archaeological knowledge of the fundamental impact of human activities on the landscape due to sedentism and agriculture (early anthropogenic hypothesis). Our study shows that most periods of intensified colluvial deposition often, but not always, date to times with colder, more humid climatic periods. The spatial and temporal correlation of main depositional phases with archaeological finds points to land use as the determining factor of colluvial deposition, at least since Roman times. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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