4.7 Article

Provenance and paleoenvironmental context of the Late Pleistocene thin aeolian silt mantles in southwestern Poland - A widespread parent material for soils

Journal

CATENA
Volume 204, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2021.105377

Keywords

Loess; Cover beds; Strontium and neodymium isotopes; MLA analyses; Geochemistry

Funding

  1. National Science Center (Poland) project Sonata 8 [2014/15/D/ST10/04087]
  2. National Science Center (Poland) project Opus 15 [2018/29/B/ST10/01282]
  3. National Science Center (Poland) [2018/29/B/ST10/00610]
  4. NAWA PROM programme [PPI/PRO/2018/1/00004/U/001]
  5. Leading Research Groups support project

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This study in SW Poland focuses on the provenance and formation of thin loess deposits, indicating a mix of local Sudetic and Scandinavian sources attributed to the Great Odra Valley. Isotopic and mineralogical analyses reveal the origins of the thin loess mantles, with Luminescence ages pointing to formation during and shortly after the Last Glacial Maximum. Anomalies in mineralogy and isotopic composition are connected with influence of Sudetic mountain rivers and locally blowing silt material by katabatic winds.
Thin loess deposits are widespread soil parent materials and important archives for paleoenvironmental reconstruction. The origin of loess in SW Poland is attributed to the Great Odra Valley (GOV), following the general concept that large rivers play a major role in regional silt supply. Yet, the precise provenance (glacier sources and/or local rocks) of silts, possibly deflated from dry GOV braided riverbeds, is not clear. Our study of thin and thick loess mantles in SW Poland for the first time indicates the provenance of thin loess based on mineralogical (MLA-SEM) and isotopic analyses (Nd-143/Nd-144, Sr-87/Sr-86). Luminescence ages of five localities point to thin loess mantle formation during and shortly (23.0 to 17.7 ka yr) after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Our isotopic data indicate that thin loess deposits in SW Poland are the mixtures of two main components - local Sudetic and Scandinavian, the latter delivered by the Fennoscandian ice sheet (FIS). Also, detailed analyses of heavy minerals show that a single mineral (e.g., hornblende) may come from both Sudetic and Scandinavian sources. This research highlights the role of the (Pleistocene) GOV in collecting and homogenizing materials, while supplying the region with fine particles to be deflated by paleowinds from open surfaces. Anomalies in mineralogy and isotopic composition are connected with influence of Sudetic mountain rivers and locally blowing silt material by katabatic winds. Regional grain size differentiation of thin loess mantles explains transport distance and altitude.

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