Natural and human-induced prehistoric and historical soil erosion and landscape development in Southwestern Tennessee, USA

被引:28
作者
Dotterweich, Markus [1 ]
Ivester, Andrew H. [2 ]
Hanson, Paul R. [3 ]
Larsen, Daniel [4 ]
Dye, David H. [5 ]
机构
[1] Geoarch Consulting, Paul Munch Str 3, D-76829 Landau, Germany
[2] Univ West Georgia, Dept Geosci, Carrollton, GA 30118 USA
[3] Univ Nebraska, Sch Nat Resources, Lincoln, NE 68583 USA
[4] Univ Memphis, Dept Earth Sci, Memphis, TN 38152 USA
[5] Univ Memphis, Dept Earth Sci, Memphis, TN 38152 USA
关键词
Soil erosion; Legacy sediment; Prehistoric land use; Mississippian culture; European settlement; North America;
D O I
10.1016/j.ancene.2015.05.003
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Eastern North America has seen widespread soil erosion in recent centuries. While the impact of soil erosion and feedbacks to the environment have been recognized for the period of European settlement, the period of prehistoric cultivation by Native Americans and its effect on soil erosion are largely unexplored. At the Dogwood gully system, a 820,000 m(2) watershed located along the Chickasaw Bluff in southwestern Tennessee, extensive geoarchaeological investigations, which include historical data, have enabled a detailed examination of soil erosion history. The results yield insight into the relative influence on soil erosion of human activities (both prehistoric and historical) versus natural geomorphodynamic processes controlled by climate and neotectonics. Three relatively short phases of geomorphic activity occurred throughout the Holocene. In the mid-Holocene climate changes caused a change or decline in the protecting vegetation cover which triggered fires, runoff, and soil erosion. The influence of Archaic and early Woodland peoples on the landscape has remained elusive. The loss of at least 12 cm of topsoil during the Mississippi period (similar to 900-1400 CE) may have influenced land abandonment in the 14th century. After the introduction of European agricultural techniques, a similar amount of soil was eroded but within a period of only 80 years. In the 1930s the area was reforested but runoff and gullying are still active on bare surfaces. The research shows that the impact of prehistoric land use patterns on the geomorphic system was likely generally much more important than previous studies has suggested. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:6 / 24
页数:19
相关论文
共 121 条
[1]   Geomorphic response to historical agriculture at Monument Hill in the Blue Ridge foothills of central Virginia [J].
Ambers, RKR ;
Druckenbrod, DL ;
Ambers, CP .
CATENA, 2006, 65 (01) :49-60
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2007, SPELLING HANDWRITING
[3]   Statistical treatment of fluvial dose distributions from southern Colorado arroyo deposits [J].
Arnold, L. J. ;
Balley, R. M. ;
Tucker, G. E. .
QUATERNARY GEOCHRONOLOGY, 2007, 2 (1-4) :162-167
[4]  
ASHE WW, 1909, REV REV, V39, P439
[5]  
BARKER G, 2005, TENNESSEE ARCHAEOLOG, V2, P3
[6]  
Barnhardt M. L., 1988, SE GEOGRAPHER, V28, P1
[7]   Palaeoflood and floodplain records from Spain: Evidence for long-term climate variability and environmental changes [J].
Benito, G. ;
Thorndycraft, V. R. ;
Rico, M. ;
Sanchez-Moya, Y. ;
Sopena, A. .
GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2008, 101 (1-2) :68-77
[8]  
Bennett H. H., 1939, SOIL CONSERVATION
[9]  
Berglund B. E., ECOLOGICAL B, V41
[10]   Principal land use changes anticipated in Europe [J].
Bouma, J ;
Varallyay, G ;
Batjes, NH .
AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 1998, 67 (2-3) :103-119