5 results on '"Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf"'
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2. Late Pleistocene to Early Holocene natural and human influenced sediment dynamics and soil formation in a 0-order catchment in SW-Germany (Palatinate Forest)
- Author
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Peter Kühn, Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf, Susann Müller, Oliver Nelle, and Markus Dotterweich
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Paleontology ,Preboreal ,Erosion ,Geochemistry ,Sediment ,Aeolian processes ,Younger Dryas ,Glacial period ,Silt ,Deposition (geology) ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
This paper presents the dynamics of sedimentation processes and soil development of a steeply sloping 0-order catchment in the sandy Lower Bunter of the south-western mid-range mountains in the Palatinate Forest (Germany) during the transition period from the Late Glacial to the Early Holocene. Field investigations, chemical, physical, micromorphological and anthracological analyses revealed a complex palaeosol-sediment sequence along the thalweg of a dry valley, where a significant amount of the sediment from the adjacent slopes had been captured. The deposition of aeolian sands in the lowermost sediment layer took place in the early Late Glacial. The subsequent sediments were deposited by slope-wash and aeolian processes. It contains a higher amount of silt and dates from the Allerod. The occurrence of Laacher See Tephra (LST) indicates that this sediment has been near the surface around 12,900 cal. BP. It also shows characteristics of palaeosols similar to the Usselo/Finow soils in north-eastern Germany. In the overlying material, the amount of root remnants, other organic matter and rounded bone fragments possibly indicates the presence of people in this area. On top, alternating reddish brown, coarse to fine sand and small, partly rounded stones with some small intercalated aggregations of humic material rich in charcoal dating to between 11,000 and 12,000 cal. BP were deposited. The layers are overlain by clearly visible and evenly distributed wavy clay-illuviation bands typical for a Luvisol. In the upper metre, a Cambisol has developed. The sediment structure shows typical features of a flash-flood event in the Preboreal. The stratigraphy suggests that phases of sedimentation caused by water and aeolian erosion took place in the Allerod, Younger Dryas, and Preboreal. Discussion considers climate driven natural processes as well as the possibility that the manipulation of forest vegetation by fire through sedentary Mesolithic hunter–gatherer groups created open areas and enabled intensive soil erosion at a local scale. more...
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- 2013
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Catalog
3. The existence of open areas during the Mesolithic: evidence from aeolian sediments in the Elbe–Jeetzel area, northern Germany
- Author
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Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf, Alexandra Hilgers, and Nicole Klasen
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Archeology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Ecology ,Aeolian processes ,Glacial period ,Vegetation ,Old-growth forest ,Holocene ,Natural (archaeology) ,Geology ,Mesolithic - Abstract
Traditionally Mesolithic hunter–gatherer cultures are supposed to have lived in a primeval forest environment with a closed vegetation cover during the Early and Mid-Holocene. It is not until the onset of subsequent Neolithic agricultural societies that the development of more expansive open areas is assumed. Therefore our perception of the Mesolithic economy in the European lowlands is highly affected by the idaea of adaptation to dense forest environments and a very stable system of resource exploitation. However, recent palaeoenvironmental studies provide evidence that areas of open landscapes must have existed at least temporarily during the Mesolithic and evoke the question whether human impact may be accountable for this. Re-activation of Late Glacial inland dunes may serve as an indicator for vegetation clearances. Using both optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and 14 C-dates from five inland dune sites with traces of Mesolithic activity in the Elbe–Jeetzel-area (N-Germany) we prove that asynchronous events of aeolian sedimentation persisted during the Mesolithic, especially during the older Mesolithic around 9000 a and the late Mesolithic from 7000 a and 6000 a. There is no evidence that Holocene climatic deteriorations like the 8.2 ka event had an effect on the intensity of aeolian sedimentation. We conclude that either natural factors or Mesolithic human impact or most likely a combination of both must have been a major driving force for the creation of open areas and thus ongoing aeolian activity while supra-regional climatic causes seem less probable. A prominent younger phase of human induced aeolian activity was identified during the Late Neolithic. more...
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- 2013
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4. Holocene aeolian dynamics in the European sand-belt as indicated by geochronological data
- Author
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Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf and Knut Kaiser
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Archeology ,Geology ,Sedimentation ,Archaeology ,Group (stratigraphy) ,River elbe ,Period (geology) ,Aeolian processes ,Younger Dryas ,Physical geography ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Holocene ,Subboreal - Abstract
Aeolian sands are widespread in the European sand-belt. While there is a consensus about the timing of increased aeolian activity and, in contrast, of surface stabilization during the Lateglacial, knowledge about Holocene aeolian dynamics is still very sparse. It is generally assumed that aeolian processes have been closely connected to human activities since at least the Neolithic period. A compilation of 189 luminescence dates from aeolian sands of Holocene age and 301 14C-dates from palaeo-surfaces, comprising palaeosols, buried peats and archaeological features from the whole sand-belt, is plotted as histograms and kernel density plots and divided into sub-phases by cluster analysis. This is also done separately for the dates from the areas west and east of the river Elbe. Our results show that aeolian activity did not cease with the end of the Younger Dryas but continued in the whole European sand-belt until the Mid-Atlantic (c. 6500 a BP), presenting evidence of vegetation-free areas at least at the local scale. During the subsequent time period evidence of aeolian sedimentation is sparse, and surface stabilization is indicated by a cluster of palaeo-surfaces ascribed to the early Subboreal (c. 5000 cal. a BP). The agglomeration of luminescence ages around 4000 years is probably connected with intensified land use during the Late Neolithic. Younger phases of aeolian sedimentation are indicated by clusters of luminescence ages around 1800 years, a group of luminescence ages from the Netherlands and NW Germany around 900 years, and a group of ages around 680 years in Germany. Among the dates from palaeo-surfaces, clusters were identified around 2700, 1300 and 900 cal. a BP as well as around 690 cal. a BP in the western part and 610 cal. a BP in the eastern part of the sand-belt. The clusters within the luminescence ages and the 14C-dates coincide with phases where increased human impact can be deduced from archaeological and historical sources as well as from environmental history. more...
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- 2012
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5. Environmental development and local human impact in the Jeetzel valley (N Germany) since 10 ka BP as detected by geoarchaeological analyses in a coupled aeolian and lacustrine sediment archive at Soven
- Author
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Helmut Brückner, Falko Turner, Oliver Nelle, Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf, and Swetlana Peters
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551.7 ,aeolian sand ,human impact ,Environmental Development ,Neolithisation ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,iron age ,mesolithic ,Archaeology ,lcsh:Geology ,pollen ,Aeolian sand ,Aeolian processes ,OSL ,charcoal ,Geology - Abstract
While archaeological records indicate an intensive Mesolithic occupation of dune areas situated along river valleys, relatively little knowledge exists about environmental interactions in the form of land-use strategies and their possible local impacts. The combination of geoarchaeological, chronological, geochemical and palaeoecological research methods and their application both on a Mesoltihic site situated on top of a dune and the adjacent palaeochannel sediments allows for a detailed reconstruction of the local environmental development around the Soven site in the Jeetzel valley (Northern Germany) since ~10.5 ka cal BP. Based on the results, we identified four phases that may be related to local human impact twice during the Mesolithic, the Neolithic and the Iron Ages and are discussed on the backdrop of the regional settlement history. Although nearby Mesolithic occupation is evident on archaeological grounds, the identification of synchronous impacts on the vegetation in the local environmental records remains tentative even in respect of the broad methodical spectrum applied. Vice versa, human impact is strongly indicated by palaeoecological and geochemical proxies during the Neolithic period, but cannot be connected to archaeological records in the area so far. A younger phase of human impact – probably consisting of seasonal livestock farming in the wetlands – is ascribed to the Iron Age economy and comprises local soil erosion, raised concentrations of phosphates and urease, and the facilitation of grazing related taxa., research more...
- Published
- 2015
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