Evolution of Chernozems in the Northern Caucasus, Russia during the secondhalf of the Holocene: carbonate status of paleosols as a tool for paleoenvironmental reconstruction
Os. Khokhlova et al., Evolution of Chernozems in the Northern Caucasus, Russia during the secondhalf of the Holocene: carbonate status of paleosols as a tool for paleoenvironmental reconstruction, GEODERMA, 104(1-2), 2001, pp. 115-133
A chronosequence of Chernozems buried under kurgans (funeral mounds) dated
archaeologically to > 5000, 3800-4000 and 1600-1700 years BP as well as the
modern surface Chernozems were studied to reconstruct environmental change
in the Central Northern Caucasus in the second half of the Holocene. Speci
al emphasis was made on the detailed morphological and analytical character
istics of pedogenic carbonates and microscopic investigation of phytoliths.
In the paleosols buried > 5000 years BP, carbonates represented by compact
micritic pedofeatures are in the uppermost part of the solum; neoformed gy
psum is found below. This differs from the features of the modern soils and
the paleosols buried 1600-1700 years BP in which the upper part of the pro
file is leached, pedogenic carbonates occur mostly in the form of diffuse p
seudomycelium, impregnations and fine films, whereas gypsum is absent. The
comparison of morphological features of the paleosols and the modern soils
confirms the general tendency of paleoenvironment evolution from warm and d
ry in the Atlantic period to cooler and more humid in the Late Subboreal an
d Subatlantic periods. The compaction of soil mass and tonguing of humus ho
rizon together with some dissolution of carbonate pedofeatures and signs of
high biological activity in the paleosols buried 3800-4000 years BP are th
ought to indicate contrasting seasonal and annual variations of precipitati
on in early Subboreal period. Presence of calcified root cells of perfect h
abit in the paleosols of this chronointerval is also interpreted as evidenc
e of contrasting seasonal climate. Hard carbonate nodules were found in all
Chernozems of the chronosequence; the size of nodules, their internal poro
sity and recrystallization phenomena increase with age. We assume nodules t
o be relict pedofeatures in the Subatlantic paleosols and modern soils, whi
ch were transformed but not completely destroyed during the late Holocene h
umidification and enhancement of leaching. Thus, a multiphase model of carb
onate pedofeatures formation is dominant in the soils studied. Phytolith as
semblages indicate meadow-steppe vegetation in the Atlantic periods later i
n the Subboreal and Subatlantic periods, forest vegetation appears. Meadow
(with some steppe elements) associations also determined in the late Holoce
ne profiles probably reflect anthropogenic deforestation. These results are
in good agreement with the interpretation of paleosol's properties. We con
clude that complex characteristic of pedogenic carbonates, which we define
with the term "carbonate status" is one of the most valuable sources of the
paleogeographical information in the chronosequences of steppe and forest-
steppe soils. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.