1. Holocene environmental variability in the Central Ebro Basin (NE Spain) from geoarchaeological and pedological records.
- Author
-
Pérez-Lambán, Fernando, Peña-Monné, José Luis, Badía-Villas, David, Picazo Millán, Jesús Vicente, Sampietro-Vattuone, María Marta, Alcolea Gracia, Marta, Aranbarri, Josu, González-Sampériz, Penélope, and Fanlo Loras, Javier
- Subjects
- *
GEOLOGICAL basins , *ARID regions , *SOIL erosion , *WATERSHEDS , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Environmental fluctuations during the Holocene caused important landscape changes in the Central Ebro Basin, which is a very sensitive region due to its semiarid climate, lithology, and continuous human presence. Severe erosion processes hinder palaeoenvironmental and archaeological record preservation. Infills of ephemeral stream valleys in semiarid environments are some of the best contexts for geoarchaeological studies. In this paper, we analyse the geomorphological processes, pedological features, and charcoal and pollen content and composition of the sedimentary sequence of La Poza Valley catchment area, with the support of additional information from La Bajada Valley. 14 C dates for 13 charcoal fragments provide the necessary chronological control. We describe 5 sedimentary units and a polycyclic sequence of six soils that covers most of the Holocene, beginning ca. 9.5 ky cal BP. Buried soils help to identify stability periods in the sedimentary sequence, while incision stages are detected through erosive contacts and terraced organisation of the sedimentary units. Charcoal and pollen content and composition, as well as the soil development, reveal an open forest of junipers and pines for the Early Holocene in the lower part of the sequence (mainly in Unit 1), very different from the current deforested landscape, also represented in the sequence (Unit 4). Thus, La Poza record shows the environment was favourable for hunter-gatherers from the Late Mesolithic and for the first Neolithic farmers. From then on, progressive degradation due to a combination of climate changes and increasing human pressure led to the current deforested landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF