The "Black Floodplain Soil" in the Amoneburger Becken, Germany: a lower Holocene marker horizon and indicator of an upper Atlantic to Subboreal dry period in Central Europe?

Authors
Citation
H. Rittweger, The "Black Floodplain Soil" in the Amoneburger Becken, Germany: a lower Holocene marker horizon and indicator of an upper Atlantic to Subboreal dry period in Central Europe?, CATENA, 41(1-3), 2000, pp. 143-164
Citations number
65
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
CATENA
ISSN journal
03418162 → ACNP
Volume
41
Issue
1-3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
143 - 164
Database
ISI
SICI code
0341-8162(200009)41:1-3<143:T"FSIT>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
In many sediment profiles of Central European floodplains, a black horizon is found between Late Glacial and middle to upper Holocene sediments. This horizon is rich in clay and humic material, and is referred to as "Black Fl oodplain Soil" (BFS). Its widespread occurrence in the Amoneburger Becken n ear Marburg (Hessen) provides some new insights into the period and circums tances of its development. As a polygenetic formation, the BFS is of specia l importance for paleoecological and archeological research. It was probabl y supplied with clay and humic substances from the surrounding terrestrial chernozemic soils and therefore, it also has to be regarded as a sediment. It developed mainly in the Boreal and Atlantic periods but did not gain its final characteristics until a following dry period, which led to a lowerin g of the ground-water table and widespread illuviation in the floodplains, even in former lacustrine deposits. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All righ ts reserved.