scholarly journals Late Pleistocene and Holocene terrestrial geomorphodynamics and soil formation in northeastern Germany: a review of geochronological data

2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 405-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph Kappler ◽  
Knut Kaiser ◽  
Mathias Küster ◽  
Alexander Nicolay ◽  
Alexander Fülling ◽  
...  
1980 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 172-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick F. Peterson

AbstractA visually prominent desert soil with a horizon of clay accumulation (Typic Natrargid) has formed under an arid climate in Panamint Valley, California, in sandy, very calcareous, saline fan alluvium in less than about 3500 yr, and probably less than 2000 yr. Such soils can be used as stratigraphic markers, but could be confused with other desert soils with clay-accumulation horizons (Haplargids) which occur much more commonly on desert alluvial fans, are mostly late Pleistocene or older, and do not form in parent materials that are still calcareous. This Natrargid formed in a playa-margin environment, where clay for translocation and sodium salts that engender rapid clay movement probably were provided by dust fall.


Author(s):  
V. S. Zykina ◽  
V. S. Zykin ◽  
A. O. Volvakh ◽  
L. G. Smolyaninova ◽  
I. Y. Ovchinnikov

The loess-paleosol sequence of the Krasnogorskoye section in the low-altitude area of the northeastern Altai Mountains, can provide a yardstick for estimating the age of the Paleolithic sites and reconstructing environmental and climatic changes. Its correlation with the respective sequence of the southern part of the West Siberian Plain is evaluated. Five pedocomplexes are studied in detail, evidencing the evolution of the Middle and Late Pleistocene soil formation from the Shadrikha interglacial to the Karga interstadial. Buried soils of the Shadrikha, Shipunovo, Koinikha, and Kazantsevo warm stages formed under a climate that was warmer and more humid than today. After the Kazantsevo interglacial, both the range and the frequency of climatic oscillations show marked changes. It is demonstrated that the warm stages of this interval differ from the earlier ones by lesser warming and shorter duration by a cooler and more arid climate. Seven loess horizons dividing pedocomplexes are established. Nonmetric and metric analyses of quartz sand grains support the eolian origin of loess horizons under cryoarid conditions. The size of grains in the Late Pleistocene portion of the Krasnogorskoye section attests to the intensifi cation of the loess processes. Higher magnetic susceptibility during the cool stages and higher frequency-dependent susceptibility during the warm stages evidence marked climatic oscillations. After the Kazantsevo interglacial, the amplitude fades and the pattern of paleoclimatic signal recorded by the magnetic properties of loess and paleosol in the section are close to the “Alaskan” type.


Data in Brief ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 808-813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Réka Lukács ◽  
Marcel Guillong ◽  
Axel K. Schmitt ◽  
Kata Molnár ◽  
Olivier Bachmann ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 306 ◽  
pp. 42-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Dotterweich ◽  
Peter Kühn ◽  
Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf ◽  
Susann Müller ◽  
Oliver Nelle

1996 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-143
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Zech ◽  
Rupert Bäumler ◽  
Oskana Savoskul ◽  
Gerlinde Sauer

Abstract. In the Plotnikova Valley, west of Petropavlovsk in South Kamchatka, two valley drift complexes can be identified. They are correlated with glaciofluvial terraces. The older, so called M1-moraines descend to about 300 m a.s.l. corresponding with the T1-terraces; they are smoothand vague-shaped, without kettles. The younger, so called M2-moraines descend to 350-450 m a.s.l.; their relief is well formed and rich in kettles and ridges, and they are connected with the T2-terraces. The soils developed on these drifts and terraces do not differ significantly with respect to colour and weathering intensity. Soils of the older drift and terraces reveal stronger cryogenetic disturbances and their boulders and gravels are characterized by more pronounced weathering crusts in comparison to the younger drift and terraces. No features indicating interglacial weathering can be identified in the subsoils. But all soils are stratified by 3-4 tephra layers, due to the following eruptions: tephra 1 = Opala, 1400-1500 a BP; tephra 2 = Ksudach 1, 1700-1800 a BP; tephra 3 = Ksudach 2 = 6000 a BP; tephra 4 = Kuril Lake Il'inskay, 7600-7700 a BP (BRAITSEVA et al. 1992). According to these results it is supposed that both moraines indicate Late Pleistocene glaciation; the M1 drift was deposited during an early phase of the Late Pleistocene, the M2 drift characterizes a second phase of the Late Pleistocene, separated only by an interstadial, not by an interglacial. In contrast to Middle Europe, early Late Pleistocene glaciation has been more pronounced than Late Pleistocene second phase glaciation. Studying soil development on frontal moraines along a sequence from 350 to 1000 m a.s.l. in the Topolovaya-Valley it was found that up to about 930 m a.s.l. all soils are stratified by tephra 1-4 layers, indicating that the age of the corresponding moraines is older than 7600/7700 a BP. Drift in about 980 m a.s.l. shows only tephra 1 and 2. These moraines are older than 1700/1800 a BP, but younger than 6000 a BP. Probably they indicate a glacial advance during the middle Holocene (Neoglacial). In 1000 m a.s.l. two additional ridges can be identified, well formed with initial soil formation but without tephra. According to the lichenometric results they characterize snow and ice accumulations during the so-called "Little Ice Age".


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Onn Crouvi ◽  
Rivka Amit ◽  
Yehouda Enzel

<p>Quaternary loess covers desert margins and vast areas of the Negev, southern Israel. The Negev loess is among the best-studied desert loess, with research going back to the early 20<sup>th</sup> century. The contrast between carbonate rocks of the Negev and its silicate-rich coarse-silt loess allows determining the loess sources, learning the synoptic-scale paleoclimatology, and exploring processes of coarse silt formation. Here, we present an overview of new perspectives on the origins and climatic significance of the Negev loess, expand on how (a) coarse silts affected soils farther downwind, and (b) how the loess has now turned into an active dust source.</p><p>The sources of the Negev loess are the (a) distal Sahara and Arabia delivering fine silts and clays, transported over thousands of kilometers, and (b) proximal sand dunes in Sinai and Negev, advancing and concurrently supplying the coarse silts to the loess accretion through eolian abrasion of sand grains. It was found that the coarse silts which compose the majority of the loess, commenced during the late middle Pleistocene – early late Pleistocene, coeval with the appearance of the advancing Sinai/Negev sand dunes and the first coarse silt accretion in regional soils; The main loess formation episode is ~95-10 ka, when the dunes appeared in the Negev. Within the loess, the dust mass accumulations rates (MAR), and consequently, soil formation rates, spatiotemporally vary according to specific site location and distance relative to the proximal sources. With increasing distance beyond the loess zone, both dust MARs and grain size gradually decrease; thus, whereas Mediterranean mountains located in central Israel, tens of kilometers downwind the loess, exhibit thick soils on top of the carbonate bedrock, the even wetter regions in northern Israel, located hundreds kilometers away from the loess, exhibit only thin soils. Thus, in Mediterranean regions located at the desert fringe, coarse silt influx is one of the main factors in determining the environmental sustainability, rather than only the precipitation amount.</p><p>During the Holocene, dust MARs in the Negev were much lower than late Pleistocene ones, and loess was not formed. Recently, the Negev loess became a prime source of dust mainly due to anthropogenic interferences, contributing to the regional dust cycle, and thus, at present the loess zone is a dust source rather than a dust sink. Today, the Negev loess is a non-replenishable natural resource that is slowly eroding and disappearing from the landscape.</p>


1974 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-30
Author(s):  
M.F. Van Oosten ◽  
S. Slager ◽  
A.G. Jongmans

[183.64:141.791]In a loamy sand profile with deep watertable, developed in Pleistocene deposits and showing mottling patterns and fine-textured bands and tongues, four soil-forming processes were recognizable: illuviation of fine clay and iron oxides, biological activity, pseudogleying, and breakdown of the clay fraction at the upper side of the illuviation horizon. The genesis of this soil can be explained by assuming that soil formation started where frost wedges occurred in the profile during the late Pleistocene and proceeded further at these points than in other parts of the soil. (Abstract retrieved from CAB Abstracts by CABI’s permission)


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