4.3 Article

Asynchronous Holocene colluvial and alluvial aggradation: A matter of hydrosedimentary connectivity

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 544-555

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0959683612463105

Keywords

central Europe; floodplains; human impact; late Holocene; OSL dating; soil erosion

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [TH-572/1-1]

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Based on Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) and radiocarbon dating we establish chronologies of colluviation and alluviation in different floodplain sections of the northwestern Wetterau loess basin (Germany). Similar to some other European valley floors, Holocene floodplain aggradation is marked by two important breaks: (1) a millennial-scale delay between the Neolithic agricultural colluviation and floodplain aggradation. In loess catchments agricultural colluviation started at about 7000 cal. BP and anthropogenic floodplain aggradation only at about 2200 +/- 200 cal. BP; (2) a centennial-scale variability in a temporary rise in rates of anthropogenic floodplain aggradation (up to 3.6 +/- 1.7 mm/yr) during the High Middle Ages in directly neighbouring reaches. Independent archaeologic, historic, and vegetation records document distinct agricultural histories of hillsides and floodplains and highlight the importance of hydrosedimentary connectivity as compared with land use intensity. The late Iron Age start of alluviation can be linked to the introduction of an integrated land use system with intense cultivation on hillsides and immediate neighbouring floodplains. The centennial-scale variability of medieval peak aggradation is a result of the successive introduction (or temporal failure) of hydraulic water milling infrastructure. Using palaeoecological and geomorphological information for reconstructing cause and consequence of sediment redistribution in coupled human-natural systems requires firm information about the spatial organisation and technological abilities that are associated with socio-agricultural transformations.

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