Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany

The Rieseberger Moor is a fen, 145 hectares in size, situated about 20 km east of Brunswick (Braunschweig), Lower Saxony, Germany. Peat was dug in the fen – with changing intensity - since the mid-18th century until around AD 1955. According to Schneekloth & Schneider (1971) the remaining peat (...

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Main Author: Grüger, Eberhard
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.817933
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.817933
id ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.817933
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic DEPTH, sediment/rock
Pinus
Picea
Ephedra distachya-type
Ephedra fragilis-type
Hippophae
Juniperus
Quercus
Ulmus
Fraxinus
Tilia
Hedera
Viscum
Fagus
Carpinus
Salix
Alnus
Betula
Corylus
Apiaceae
Artemisia
Boraginaceae
Brassicaceae
Caryophyllaceae
Chenopodiaceae
Calluna
Centaurea cyanus
Centaurea scabiosa-type
Compositae
Cyperaceae
Epilobium
Ericaceae
Fallopia convolvulus
Filipendula
Geum-type
Potentilla-type
Gentianaceae
Helianthemum nummularium-type
Lysimachia
Mentha-type
Menyanthes trifoliata
Mercurialis annua
Parnassia palustris
Plantago lanceolata-type
Poaceae
Polemonium coeruleum
Potamogeton natans-type
Ranunculus acris-type
Rosaceae
Rubiaceae
Rumex
Sanguisorba officinalis
Saxifraga aizoides-type
Saxifraga oppositifolia-type
Thalictrum
Typha latifolia-type
Varia
Pollen indeterminata
Equisetum
Lycopodium clavatum-type
Polypodiaceae
Polypodium vulgare
Sphagnum
Dachnowski corer
Counting, palynology
spellingShingle DEPTH, sediment/rock
Pinus
Picea
Ephedra distachya-type
Ephedra fragilis-type
Hippophae
Juniperus
Quercus
Ulmus
Fraxinus
Tilia
Hedera
Viscum
Fagus
Carpinus
Salix
Alnus
Betula
Corylus
Apiaceae
Artemisia
Boraginaceae
Brassicaceae
Caryophyllaceae
Chenopodiaceae
Calluna
Centaurea cyanus
Centaurea scabiosa-type
Compositae
Cyperaceae
Epilobium
Ericaceae
Fallopia convolvulus
Filipendula
Geum-type
Potentilla-type
Gentianaceae
Helianthemum nummularium-type
Lysimachia
Mentha-type
Menyanthes trifoliata
Mercurialis annua
Parnassia palustris
Plantago lanceolata-type
Poaceae
Polemonium coeruleum
Potamogeton natans-type
Ranunculus acris-type
Rosaceae
Rubiaceae
Rumex
Sanguisorba officinalis
Saxifraga aizoides-type
Saxifraga oppositifolia-type
Thalictrum
Typha latifolia-type
Varia
Pollen indeterminata
Equisetum
Lycopodium clavatum-type
Polypodiaceae
Polypodium vulgare
Sphagnum
Dachnowski corer
Counting, palynology
Grüger, Eberhard
Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
topic_facet DEPTH, sediment/rock
Pinus
Picea
Ephedra distachya-type
Ephedra fragilis-type
Hippophae
Juniperus
Quercus
Ulmus
Fraxinus
Tilia
Hedera
Viscum
Fagus
Carpinus
Salix
Alnus
Betula
Corylus
Apiaceae
Artemisia
Boraginaceae
Brassicaceae
Caryophyllaceae
Chenopodiaceae
Calluna
Centaurea cyanus
Centaurea scabiosa-type
Compositae
Cyperaceae
Epilobium
Ericaceae
Fallopia convolvulus
Filipendula
Geum-type
Potentilla-type
Gentianaceae
Helianthemum nummularium-type
Lysimachia
Mentha-type
Menyanthes trifoliata
Mercurialis annua
Parnassia palustris
Plantago lanceolata-type
Poaceae
Polemonium coeruleum
Potamogeton natans-type
Ranunculus acris-type
Rosaceae
Rubiaceae
Rumex
Sanguisorba officinalis
Saxifraga aizoides-type
Saxifraga oppositifolia-type
Thalictrum
Typha latifolia-type
Varia
Pollen indeterminata
Equisetum
Lycopodium clavatum-type
Polypodiaceae
Polypodium vulgare
Sphagnum
Dachnowski corer
Counting, palynology
description The Rieseberger Moor is a fen, 145 hectares in size, situated about 20 km east of Brunswick (Braunschweig), Lower Saxony, Germany. Peat was dug in the fen – with changing intensity - since the mid-18th century until around AD 1955. According to Schneekloth & Schneider (1971) the remaining peat (fen and wood peat) is predominantly 1.5 to 2 m thick (maximum 2.7 m). Part of the fen - now a nature reserve (NSG BR 005) - is wooded (Betula, Salix, Alnus). For more information on the Rieseberger Moor see http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rieseberger_Moor. Willi Selle was the first to publish pollen diagrams from this site (Selle 1935, profiles Rieseberger Torfmoor I and II).This report deals with a 2.2 m long profile from the wooded south-eastern part of the fen consisting of strongly decomposed fen peat taken A.D. 1965 and studied by pollen analysis in the same year. The peat below 1.45 m contained silt and clay, samples 1.48 and 1.58 m even fine sand. These samples had to be treated with HF (hydrofluoric acid) in addition to the treatment with hot caustic potash solution. The coring ended in sandy material. The new pollen data reflect the early part of the known postglacial development of the vegetation of this area: the change from a birch dominated forest to a pine forest and the later spreading of Corylus and of the thermophilous deciduous tree genera Quercus, Ulmus, Tilia and Fraxinus followed by the expansion of Alnus. The new data are in agreement with Selle's results, except for Alnus, which in Selle's pollen diagram II shows high values (up to 42% of the arboreal pollen sum) even in samples deposited before Corylus and Quercus started to spread. On contrary the new pollen diagram shows that alder pollen – although present in all samples - is frequent in the three youngest pollen spectra only. A period with dominating Alnus as seen in the uppermost part of Selle's pollen diagrams is missing. The latter is most likely the result of peat cutting at the later coring site, whereas the early, unusually high alder values of Selle's pollen study are probably caused by contamination of the pollen samples with younger peat. Selle took peat samples usually with a “Torfbohrer” (= Hiller sampler). This side-filling type of sampler with an inner chamber and an outer loose jacket offers - if not handled with appropriate care - ample opportunities to contaminate older peat with carried off younger material. Pollen grains of Fagus (2 % of the arboreal pollen sum) were found in two samples only, namely in the uppermost samples of the new profile (0.18 m) and of Selle's profile I (0.25 m). If this pollen is autochthonous, with other words: if this surface-near peat was not disturbed by human activities, the Fagus pollen indicates an Early Subboreal age of this part of the profile. The accumulation of the Rieseberg peat started during the Preboreal. Increased values of Corylus, Quercus and Ulmus indicate that sample 0.78 m of the new profile is the oldest Boreal sample. The high Alnus values prove the Atlantic age of the younger peat. Whether Early Subboreal peat exists at the site is questionable, but evidently none of the three profiles reaches to Late Subboreal time, when Fagus spread in the region. Did peat-growth end during the Subboreal? Did younger peat exist, but got lost by peat cutting or has younger peat simply not yet been found in the Rieseberg fen? These questions cannot be answered with this study. The temporary decline of the curve of Pinus for the benefit of Betula during the Preboreal, unusual for this period, is contemporaneous with the deposition of sand (Rieseberger Moor II, 1.33 - 1,41 m; samples 1.48 and 1.58 m of the new profile) and must be considered a local phenomenon. Literature: Schneekloth, Heinrich & Schneider, Siegfried (1971). Die Moore in Niedersachsen. 2. Teil. Bereich des Blattes Braunschweig der Geologischen Karte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (1:200000). - Schriften der wirtschaftswissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft zum Studium Niedersachsens e.V. Reihe A I., Band 96, Heft 2, 83 Seiten, Göttingen.Selle, Willi (1935) Das Torfmoor bei Rieseberg. – Jahresbericht des Vereins für Naturwissenschaft zu Braunschweig, 23, 46-58, Braunschweig.
format Dataset
author Grüger, Eberhard
author_facet Grüger, Eberhard
author_sort Grüger, Eberhard
title Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
title_short Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
title_full Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
title_fullStr Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
title_full_unstemmed Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany
title_sort pollen analysis of a peat profile from the rieseberger moor, lower saxony, germany
publisher PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science
publishDate 2013
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.817933
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.817933
long_lat ENVELOPE(139.967,139.967,-66.648,-66.648)
geographic Selle
geographic_facet Selle
genre Saxifraga aizoides
Saxifraga oppositifolia
genre_facet Saxifraga aizoides
Saxifraga oppositifolia
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
cc-by-3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.817933
_version_ 1766188196018782208
spelling ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.817933 2023-05-15T18:15:08+02:00 Pollen analysis of a peat profile from the Rieseberger Moor, Lower Saxony, Germany Grüger, Eberhard 2013 text/tab-separated-values https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.817933 https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.817933 en eng PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode cc-by-3.0 CC-BY DEPTH, sediment/rock Pinus Picea Ephedra distachya-type Ephedra fragilis-type Hippophae Juniperus Quercus Ulmus Fraxinus Tilia Hedera Viscum Fagus Carpinus Salix Alnus Betula Corylus Apiaceae Artemisia Boraginaceae Brassicaceae Caryophyllaceae Chenopodiaceae Calluna Centaurea cyanus Centaurea scabiosa-type Compositae Cyperaceae Epilobium Ericaceae Fallopia convolvulus Filipendula Geum-type Potentilla-type Gentianaceae Helianthemum nummularium-type Lysimachia Mentha-type Menyanthes trifoliata Mercurialis annua Parnassia palustris Plantago lanceolata-type Poaceae Polemonium coeruleum Potamogeton natans-type Ranunculus acris-type Rosaceae Rubiaceae Rumex Sanguisorba officinalis Saxifraga aizoides-type Saxifraga oppositifolia-type Thalictrum Typha latifolia-type Varia Pollen indeterminata Equisetum Lycopodium clavatum-type Polypodiaceae Polypodium vulgare Sphagnum Dachnowski corer Counting, palynology dataset Dataset 2013 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.817933 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Rieseberger Moor is a fen, 145 hectares in size, situated about 20 km east of Brunswick (Braunschweig), Lower Saxony, Germany. Peat was dug in the fen – with changing intensity - since the mid-18th century until around AD 1955. According to Schneekloth & Schneider (1971) the remaining peat (fen and wood peat) is predominantly 1.5 to 2 m thick (maximum 2.7 m). Part of the fen - now a nature reserve (NSG BR 005) - is wooded (Betula, Salix, Alnus). For more information on the Rieseberger Moor see http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rieseberger_Moor. Willi Selle was the first to publish pollen diagrams from this site (Selle 1935, profiles Rieseberger Torfmoor I and II).This report deals with a 2.2 m long profile from the wooded south-eastern part of the fen consisting of strongly decomposed fen peat taken A.D. 1965 and studied by pollen analysis in the same year. The peat below 1.45 m contained silt and clay, samples 1.48 and 1.58 m even fine sand. These samples had to be treated with HF (hydrofluoric acid) in addition to the treatment with hot caustic potash solution. The coring ended in sandy material. The new pollen data reflect the early part of the known postglacial development of the vegetation of this area: the change from a birch dominated forest to a pine forest and the later spreading of Corylus and of the thermophilous deciduous tree genera Quercus, Ulmus, Tilia and Fraxinus followed by the expansion of Alnus. The new data are in agreement with Selle's results, except for Alnus, which in Selle's pollen diagram II shows high values (up to 42% of the arboreal pollen sum) even in samples deposited before Corylus and Quercus started to spread. On contrary the new pollen diagram shows that alder pollen – although present in all samples - is frequent in the three youngest pollen spectra only. A period with dominating Alnus as seen in the uppermost part of Selle's pollen diagrams is missing. The latter is most likely the result of peat cutting at the later coring site, whereas the early, unusually high alder values of Selle's pollen study are probably caused by contamination of the pollen samples with younger peat. Selle took peat samples usually with a “Torfbohrer” (= Hiller sampler). This side-filling type of sampler with an inner chamber and an outer loose jacket offers - if not handled with appropriate care - ample opportunities to contaminate older peat with carried off younger material. Pollen grains of Fagus (2 % of the arboreal pollen sum) were found in two samples only, namely in the uppermost samples of the new profile (0.18 m) and of Selle's profile I (0.25 m). If this pollen is autochthonous, with other words: if this surface-near peat was not disturbed by human activities, the Fagus pollen indicates an Early Subboreal age of this part of the profile. The accumulation of the Rieseberg peat started during the Preboreal. Increased values of Corylus, Quercus and Ulmus indicate that sample 0.78 m of the new profile is the oldest Boreal sample. The high Alnus values prove the Atlantic age of the younger peat. Whether Early Subboreal peat exists at the site is questionable, but evidently none of the three profiles reaches to Late Subboreal time, when Fagus spread in the region. Did peat-growth end during the Subboreal? Did younger peat exist, but got lost by peat cutting or has younger peat simply not yet been found in the Rieseberg fen? These questions cannot be answered with this study. The temporary decline of the curve of Pinus for the benefit of Betula during the Preboreal, unusual for this period, is contemporaneous with the deposition of sand (Rieseberger Moor II, 1.33 - 1,41 m; samples 1.48 and 1.58 m of the new profile) and must be considered a local phenomenon. Literature: Schneekloth, Heinrich & Schneider, Siegfried (1971). Die Moore in Niedersachsen. 2. Teil. Bereich des Blattes Braunschweig der Geologischen Karte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (1:200000). - Schriften der wirtschaftswissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft zum Studium Niedersachsens e.V. Reihe A I., Band 96, Heft 2, 83 Seiten, Göttingen.Selle, Willi (1935) Das Torfmoor bei Rieseberg. – Jahresbericht des Vereins für Naturwissenschaft zu Braunschweig, 23, 46-58, Braunschweig. Dataset Saxifraga aizoides Saxifraga oppositifolia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Selle ENVELOPE(139.967,139.967,-66.648,-66.648)