CPEG 2023 Ninard
CPEG 2023 Ninard
CPEG 2023 Ninard
The bibliographic information of this book is available in the National Bibliographic Databank
of the Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania (NBDB).
ISBN: ISBN 978-609-07-0906-1 (digital PDF)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15388/Proceedings.2023.35
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3RD Crossing the Palaeontological - Ecological Gap – Vilnius, 28th-31st August 2023
Organisers
Scientific Committee
Organising Committee
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3RD Crossing the Palaeontological - Ecological Gap – Vilnius, 28th-31st August 2023
1 Faculty of Geography and Geology, Institute of Geological Sciences, Jagiellonian University, Kraków,
Poland
Session 6
2 Faculty of Geography and Geology, Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, Jagiellonian
Buried paleosols documented in the aeolian dunes of the eastern European Sand Belt are
mostly incipient Arenosols of the Late Glacial-Early Holocene age. Well-developed Podzols
are uncommon, and even more rarely such paleosols preserve ichnological record of the
past land use. Nevertheless, podzolic paleosols were found in ten inland dune sites of
Eastern and Central Poland, which this study aims to document.
Pedological and sedimentological studies were conducted in the sand pits. Grain size
distribution, carbon and nitrogen content, and pH were measured in the collected samples.
The age determination was based on the radiocarbon dating of charcoals.
In all ten sites, podzolic palaeosols occur below sandy overburden of thickness ranging from
tens of centimeters to 2 m. In four sites, cattle hoofprints and human footprints are observed
in the topmost interval of the buried soil and in the overlying sandy deposits. Most notably, all
the occurrences display similar properties, geomorphologic setting and age in the 5th–15th
century AD range of the historical Middle Ages. Well-developed eluvial and illuvial horizons,
as well as measured pedological indices, allow us to classify all the studied paleosols as
proper Podzols.
The intensity and prevalence of podzolization during the Medieval period were presumably
caused by an interaction between anthropogenic influence and conducive conditions of the
Medieval Climatic Optimum (ca. 10th-14th centuries AD). Prevalent dune remobilization,
accounting for the soil burial, was derivative of anthropogenically-induced vegetation
depletion. These included not only the indirect impact of agriculture and deforestation but
also the pasturage of the cattle, which could lead to overgrazing and destabilization of the
dune surface. Considering the consistent development and age of the Medieval podzolic
paleosols, we propose to distinguish their occurrences as a new marker horizon in the dune
deposits of the European Sand Belt under the name Grębociny soil.
Acknowledgements: This research was financed by the National Science Centre, Poland,
from the program Daina 1, grant agreement No 2017/27/L/ST10/03370.
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