TY - JOUR
T1 - Stratigraphy and chronology of Late Quaternary floodplain sediments in a historic mining area, Vils River Valley, East Bavaria, Germany
AU - Raab, Thomas
AU - Hürkamp, Kerstin
AU - Völkel, Jörg
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments:This study was financially supported by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG) within the scope of the Junior Research Group (Graduiertenkolleg) 462 Paleoecosystem Research and History (Paläoökosystemforschung und Geschichte) at the University of Regensburg. We thank Nadine Richard and Sabine Beckmann for their contribution to the Vils River Project as well as Adrian Palmer (RHUL) and Nigel Downes (BTU) for their helpful comments on the manuscript.
PY - 2010/7/1
Y1 - 2010/7/1
N2 - Analysis of 288 percussion drillings from depths of up to seven meters and a 120 m long excavated section provide new and detailed information on the Late Quaternary to Late Holocene floodplain evolution from the most important Central European iron-mining region of the 15th century. The generalized sequence of the Vils River floodplain is built of five units representing facies of different genesis (rock/saprolite, gravel, sand, loam, peat) that are identified by physical, chemical, and mineralogical parameters (grain size, clast shape, and content, TOC, bulk mineralogy). Along the 87 km length of the valley, different units/facies are found at the Upper Vils River (UVR 1-5) and at the Lower Vils River (LVR 1-4b). In both river sections, fine-grained material (flood loam) forms the major part (up to 4 m) of the alluvial sequence. 29 age determinations (24 14C, 4 IRSL, 1 tree-ring analysis) show increasing accumulation of flood loam in the last millennium. The data correlate with the beginning of mining at the Vils River and hence suggest a causal connection with mining activities in the catchment-both on the slopes and in the floodplain-with intense deposition of flood loams.
AB - Analysis of 288 percussion drillings from depths of up to seven meters and a 120 m long excavated section provide new and detailed information on the Late Quaternary to Late Holocene floodplain evolution from the most important Central European iron-mining region of the 15th century. The generalized sequence of the Vils River floodplain is built of five units representing facies of different genesis (rock/saprolite, gravel, sand, loam, peat) that are identified by physical, chemical, and mineralogical parameters (grain size, clast shape, and content, TOC, bulk mineralogy). Along the 87 km length of the valley, different units/facies are found at the Upper Vils River (UVR 1-5) and at the Lower Vils River (LVR 1-4b). In both river sections, fine-grained material (flood loam) forms the major part (up to 4 m) of the alluvial sequence. 29 age determinations (24 14C, 4 IRSL, 1 tree-ring analysis) show increasing accumulation of flood loam in the last millennium. The data correlate with the beginning of mining at the Vils River and hence suggest a causal connection with mining activities in the catchment-both on the slopes and in the floodplain-with intense deposition of flood loams.
KW - Holocene
KW - anthropogenic impact
KW - flood loam
KW - sediment facies
KW - soil erosion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77957581449&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2747/0272-3646.31.4.357
DO - 10.2747/0272-3646.31.4.357
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77957581449
SN - 0272-3646
VL - 31
SP - 357
EP - 384
JO - Physical Geography
JF - Physical Geography
IS - 4
ER -