Lake Belau and its catchment (northern Germany): A key archive of environmental history in northern central Europe since the onset of agriculture

The Holocene ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 296-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Dreibrodt ◽  
Julian Wiethold
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. G. Diedrich

The Fürstenau Formation (Lutetian, Paleogene, Eocene) is based on type sections near Fürstenau in Germany (central Europe) and is built of 22 meter thick marine glauconitic and strongly bioturbated sands, clays, and a vertebrate-rich conglomerate bed. The conglomerate layer from the Early Lutetian transgression reworked Lower Cretaceous, and Paleogene marine sediments. It is dominated by pebbles from the locally mountains which must have been transported by an ancient river in a delta fan. Marine reworked Lower Cretaceous and Paleogen pebbles/fossils, were derived from the underlying deposits of northern Germany (= southern pre North Sea basin). The benthic macrofauna is cold upwelling water influenced and non-tropical, and medium divers. The vertebrate fish fauna is extremely rich in shark teeth, with about 5,000 teeth per cubic meter of gravel. The most dominant forms are teeth from sand shark ancestors Striatolamia macrota, followed by white shark ancestors Carcharodon auriculatus. Even teeth from the magatooth shark ancestor Carcharocles sokolovi are present in a moderately diverse and condensed Paleogene fish fauna that also includes rays, chimaeras, and more then 80 different bony fish. Fragmentary turtle remains are present, and few terrestrial vertebrates and even marine mammals with phocids, sirenians and possibly whales.


Author(s):  
Sönke Hartz ◽  
Harald Lübke ◽  
Thomas Terberger

The border between the Mesolithic and the Neolithic in Central Europe is traditionally defined on the basis of subsistence strategy. It is the development from hunter-gatherer groups in the forests of the early Holocene to the first farmers. The debate on the character of this process has been going on for over 100 years. This chapter presents results of new research on this subject, with an emphasis on northern Germany.


Author(s):  
Ulrich Meßner ◽  
Michael Lothar Zettler

The amphipod fauna of Central Europe has changed dramatically over the last century. This change has increased dramatically over the past 30 years. This dynamic is well documented in northeast Germany. This study places it in a landscape-ecological context. An example of a displacement is Gammarus lacustris G.O. Sars, 1864, a circumpolar species with a variety of habitats, but relegated to relic habitats. The species turns out to be a very weak competitor. Already with the immigration of Gammarus roeselii Gervais, 1835 (probably in the 1960s), it became a relic species in northeast Germany. Massive waves of introduction of Pontocaspian species of the genera Dikerogammarus, Pontogammarus and Echinogammarus a few decades later intensified this process for this and other species.


Biologia ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gusztáv Jakab ◽  
Attila Molnár V

AbstractMorphological characters, habitat preference, and currently known distribution of the species Gagea szovitsii (A.F. Láng) Besser, a new indigenous vascular plant species of Central Europe, are presented. The plant was found in alkali grasslands of the south-eastern part of the Great Hungarian Plain (SE Hungary). Currently, this can be regarded to the westernmost occurrence of this pontic species. Both G. szovitsii and its closest relative G. bohemica are briefly characterized here with respect to their identification, ecology and distribution. Original illustrations on G. szovitsii are presented. The paper firstly emphasizes the difference of reproductive strategy between G. szovitsii and G. bohemica; the former reproduce itself primarily sexually via seeds, while the latter reproduce itself in asexual way principally by bulbils. Taking the paleo-environmental history of its habitat into consideration, the species can be regarded as an ancient, indigenous Pontic-Pannonian steppe element of Hungary.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 583-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika Segl ◽  
Ingeborg Levin ◽  
Hilla Schoch-Fischer ◽  
Marianne Münnich ◽  
Bernd Kromer ◽  
...  

Continuous 14C data of 1 or 2 weekly samples of atmospheric CO2 are presented, collected near two nuclear power plants (NPP-Biblis and NPP-Philippsburg) located in the rather densely populated upper Rhine valley. Tree-leaf and tree-ring samples from the area of a boiling water reactor in northern Germany (NPP-Würgassen) are also presented and discussed. Additional atmospheric 14CO2 samples from two continental ‘clean-air’ stations in Germany and Austria were used as reference for the polluted areas. For January 1982, these samples yield a ‘clean-air’ 14C concentration in central Europe of Δ14C=255±5‰ (7.7pCi/gC = 1.45pCi/m3 air).


1999 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
René F.B. Isarin ◽  
Sjoerd J.P. Bohncke

AbstractWe estimated minimum mean July temperatures in northwestern and central Europe during the Younger Dryas (10,950–10,15014C yr B.P.) from distributions of climate indicator plant species, which were reconstructed from 140 pollen and plant macrofossil diagrams. Paleobotanical records, mainly from the central and eastern part of the study area, show that the coldest conditions occurred early in the Younger Dryas (before ∼10,55014C yr B.P.). For this phase, mean July temperatures at sea level of around 10°C are suggested for the northern part of the British Isles and for ice-free Scandinavia. We estimated a mean July temperature of 12°C for central England, The Netherlands, and northern Germany. The 13°C mean July isotherm—largely based on the modern distribution ofTypha latifolia—was most probably located in southern England, Belgium, central Germany, and Poland. The reappearance of thermophilous elements in the records after ∼10,55014C yr B.P. suggests a summer warming, at least temporarily, of 1° to 2°C in the study area. The reconstructed temperatures are comparable with temperature estimates based on beetle data. However, they appear rather high when compared with estimates based on glaciological evidence.


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