Post-agrogenic evolution of soils in ancient Greek land use areas in the Herakleian Peninsula, southwestern Crimea

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The Holocene. – 2013. – Vol. 23 – № 4 – Р. 504–514
The paper examines the regularities of the post-agrogenic evolution of soils of differing age in the Herakleian Peninsula (southwestern Crimea, Ukraine), which developed under conditions of the sub-Mediterranean climate and have been cultivated since ancient times. Whether developed under steppe or sub-Mediterranean forest vegetation, the Crimean cinnamonic soils display different physico-chemical and geochemical characteristics after 1600 years under no cultivation. It is demonstrated that among 40 examined physico-chemical and geochemical soil characteristics, only ten are sufficiently informative to diagnose the post-agrogenic regime of a soil system. In the geographic and pedogenetic grouping of post-antique long-fallow soils, labile phosphorus content and the hue of soil colour prove to be of primary importance.

Author(s): Lisetskii F.N., Stolba V.F., Ergina E.I., Rodionova M.E., Terekhin E.A.

Language: English
Commentary: 1742046
Tags: Науки о Земле;Почвоведение