scholarly journals Peat deposits and peat-forming plants in the mires of the West Siberian northern taiga (based on studies of the Khanymei site)

Author(s):  
I I Volkova ◽  
L G Kolesnichenko ◽  
S N Kirpotin ◽  
O S Pokrovsky ◽  
S N Vorobyev
1970 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 125-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Coles ◽  
F. Alan Hibbert ◽  
Colin F. Clements

The Somerset Levels are the largest area of low-lying ground in south-west England, covering an extensive region between the highlands of Exmoor, the Brendon Hills and the Quantock Hills to the west, and the Cotswold and Mendip Hills to the east (Pl. XXIII, inset). The Quantock Hills and the Mendip Hills directly border the Levels themselves, and reach heights of over 250 metres above sea level. The valley between extends to 27 metres below sea level, but is filled to approximately the height of the present sea by a blue-grey clay. The Levels are bisected by the limestone hills of the Poldens, and both parts have other smaller areas of limestone and sand projecting above the peat deposits that cap the blue-grey clay filling. In this paper we are concerned with the northern part of the Levels, an area at present drained by the River Brue.The flat, peat-covered floor of the Brue Valley is some six kilometres wide and is flanked on the north by the Wedmore Ridge, and on the south by the Polden Hills (Pl. XXIII). In the centre of the valley, surrounded by the peat, is a group of islands of higher ground, Meare, Westhay, and Burtle. These islands, which would always have provided relatively dry ground in the Levels, are linked together by Neolithic trackways of the third millennium B.C. Several of these trackways formed the basis of a paper in these Proceedings in 1968 (Coles and Hibbert, 1968), which continued the work of Godwin and others (Godwin, 1960; Dewar and Godwin, 1963).


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga A. Kapitonova ◽  
Kristina Yu. Aksarina

The ancient aeolian forms of relief, which are mainly covered with pineries and coniferous forests, are widely spread in the territory of Western Siberia. Anthropogenic transformation of these landscapes leads to the formation of technogenic deserts and sandy outcrops on soils of light mechanical structure generally because of the development of oil and gas extraction industry. Such transformed ecosystems are often met in the north of the West Siberian Plain within a subzone of northern taiga of the taiga natural zone and the zone of the forest-tundra. In 2016–2017, we explored three sites of sandy outcrops in the territory of Purovsky District of Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug (Tyumen region): in 27 km to the south from Muravlenko, in 32 km to the southwest from Gubkinsky and in 23 km to the East-southeast of New Urengoy. The first two sites are located within the northern taiga; the third site is at the southern border of the forest-tundra, in the area of its gradual transition to the northern taiga. Results of the conducted researches show the considerable changes in a number of physical and chemical properties of podsolic sandy soils of technogenic deserts in comparison with soils of undisturbed ecosystems. We have revealed statistically significant decrease in the acidity of the surface soil layer to 5–6 units рН due to the destruction of the top soil horizons and exposure of the illuvial and eluvial horizons having smaller acidity. Our researches show the reduction of maintenance of fine fractions – clay and dusty particles – in the transformed soils and, respectively, increase in content of sand up to 95–100%. Also we have revealed statistically significant reduction of soil moisture content in soils of sandy outcrops.  Thus, the soils of technogenic deserts are characterized by ease, flowability, they are usually not fixed by vegetation and easily are affected by wind. The ecotopes, which are formed on sandy outcrops, differ in extreme conditions. They can be mastered only by a small number of specialized species-erosiophiles, shifting to disturbed felted habitats with similar natural ecotopes with the friable sandy and sabulous sandy soils, often mobile soil typical of marine and lake shallows, river alluvium, taluses, slopes of ravines. On the periphery of sandy outcrops the shafts of falling up to 4,5–5,5 m high are formed. They constitute the real danger to natural undisturbed north taiga and forest-tundra ecosystems, burying them under sandy masses.


1983 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Robinson

Summary Pollen and charcoal analyses of peat cores from Machrie Moor in the west of Arran are presented. These reveal evidence for disturbance and burning of the vegetation during the Mesolithic period at a level radiocarbon dated to 8665±155bp (GU–1427). The nature of the fires and their possible sources, either natural or anthropogenic, are discussed in the light of data from other Scottish sites of this period. The conclusion drawn is that the fires were most probably of human origin and that Arran supported a Mesolithic population for which the archaeological evidence remains to be discovered.


2007 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Marie Lézine

ABSTRACT The review of pollen data on mangrove pollen deposition in modern and late Quaternary sediments of West Africa points to two distinct signals linked to the sedimentary environment concerned. Along the littoral and on the slope of the continental shelf, mangrove peat deposits recording more than 40% of Rhizophora percentages reflect the postglacial sea-level rise and give evidence for the associated paleogeographical modifications (e.g. during the Nouakchottian transgression). Deep oceanic records show that the mangrove was present along the West African coasts during the Late Glacial Maximum reflecting local conditions of fresh water input and sea surface temperatures not as low as previously suggested. Mangrove developed after 12 500 BP as far north as 21°N; its maximum extension was recorded ca. 9500 BP reflecting the enhanced monsoon circulation over West Africa.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lapshina D. Elena ◽  
Ilya V. Filippov ◽  
Elena L. Verevkina

During the geobotanical survey of the vegetation of the southern part of the Nature Park "Numto", located within the subzone of the northern taiga in the center of the West Siberian Plain, 140 species of bryophytes, including 87 species of mosses and 53 species of liverworts, of which 24 species of mosses and all liverworts are new to the territory of the Nature Park. Two species of sphagnum mosses – Sphagnum inexpectatum and S. mirum – are the most important finds for the Western Siberia. Sphagnum inexpectatum is listed for the first time for the territory of Khanty-Mansi Autonomous District. The information on ecology and phytocenotic confinement of 18 species of mosses, known earlier in the Nature Park from one point or on a few and single finds, is supplemented. An annotated list of all identified species of bryophytes is given.


2019 ◽  
pp. 438-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osipov ◽  
Abramov

This article shows the infection of commercial cyprinids from the Middle and Lower Ob with muscle trematodes that are dangerous to humans, collected in 2016, 2017 and 2018. From the point of view of human health, the study of carp fish infected with opistorchids is important. It is in the Ob – Irtysh basin that the world's largest opisthorchiasis is located. In the study of carp fish for infection with muscle trematodes, a compression method was used. Comparing the infection of carp fishes of different species with metacercariae opistorchids from different landscape-geographical zones, one can speak of the leading role of ide in maintaining the Ob - Irtysh center of opisthorchiasis.The role of the bream in maintaining the West Siberian focus of opisthorchiasis is gradually increasing due to the ever-growing herd of this fish. O. felineus and M. biliside infestation is most severe in Middle Ob, in the central taiga zone. In another subzone - the northern taiga (v. Hills) and the forest-tundra zone (v. Aksarka), the extensiveness of the O. felineus infection is either equal to 100% or approaches it. The intensity of infection in the ide from Middle Ob found maximum values. In other, more northern subzones, the intensity of infection with O. felineus metacercaria was significantly inferior to the infection of the Middle Ob’s ide. Based on the above, we can talk about the greatest infection of carp fish in Middle Ob. The center of the opisthorchiasis is situated exactly here.


Author(s):  
L G Kolesnichenko ◽  
S N Vorobyov ◽  
S N Kirpotin ◽  
Iu Y Kolesnichenko ◽  
R M Manasypov ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document