Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition

Soils of archaeological sites are highly interesting objects for multidisciplinary research in various fields of soil science, ecology, archaeology, anthropology and other sciences. Currently, the soils of archaeological sites in the Arctic regions have not been studied sufficiently, although many a...

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Published in:Dokuchaev Soil Bulletin
Main Authors: T. I. Nizamutdinov, A. R. Suleymanov, E. N. Morgun, An. V. Gusev, O. S. Tupakhina, Al. V. Gusev, A. V. Plekhanov, D. S. Tupakhin, E. V. Abakumov
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Russian
Published: V.V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108
https://doaj.org/article/780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d 2024-09-15T18:19:09+00:00 Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition T. I. Nizamutdinov A. R. Suleymanov E. N. Morgun An. V. Gusev O. S. Tupakhina Al. V. Gusev A. V. Plekhanov D. S. Tupakhin E. V. Abakumov 2023-05-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108 https://doaj.org/article/780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d RU rus V.V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute https://bulletin.esoil.ru/jour/article/view/730 https://doaj.org/toc/0136-1694 https://doaj.org/toc/2312-4202 0136-1694 2312-4202 doi:10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108 https://doaj.org/article/780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d Бюллетень Почвенного института им. В.В. Докучаева, Vol 0, Iss 114, Pp 66-108 (2023) postanthropogenic soil formation cryosols nutrients heavy metals arctic yanao Agriculture (General) S1-972 article 2023 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108 2024-08-05T17:48:52Z Soils of archaeological sites are highly interesting objects for multidisciplinary research in various fields of soil science, ecology, archaeology, anthropology and other sciences. Currently, the soils of archaeological sites in the Arctic regions have not been studied sufficiently, although many ancient monuments beyond the polar circle have been found. This work is devoted to the study of morphological and chemical properties of soils of the archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1”, which is located beyond the northern polar circle, near the cities of Labytnangi and Salekhard (Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug). Development of these territories (according to archaeological research) began in the Eneolithic (Late IV – III millennia BC) and continues to the present day. Soil types on the territory of the monument are represented by soil-like bodies (urbikvazizems), podzols, turbozems, urbo-agrozems and peat soils with inclusions of archaeological and anthropogenic artifacts dating back to the XX century. Most of the studied soils were previously subjected to the processes of cryoturbation, although at present the lower boundary of the active layer of permafrost lies at a depth of 120–130 cm, according to the conducted electrophysical sounding. Significant changes occurred in the acid-base properties of the studied soils. In addition, anthropogenic activity entailed the introduction of biophilic elements and organic matter into the soil profile, in particular phosphorus, which is concentrated in the urbanized soil horizons (phosphorus concentrations above 2 800 mg/kg were recorded). The concentrations of heavy metals in the soils are at/below the conventional background (vicinity of Salekhard and Labytnangi). However, some excess concentrations of copper (up to 87.5 mg/kg), zinc (up to 303.3 mg/kg), lead (up to 76.1 mg/kg), and cadmium (up to 2.1 mg/kg) in the urbanized soil horizons have been detected. According to the results of the work, we can conclude that the soils of the archaeological site were formed ... Article in Journal/Newspaper nenets Nenets Autonomous Okrug permafrost Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Dokuchaev Soil Bulletin 114 66 108
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language Russian
topic postanthropogenic soil formation
cryosols
nutrients
heavy metals
arctic
yanao
Agriculture (General)
S1-972
spellingShingle postanthropogenic soil formation
cryosols
nutrients
heavy metals
arctic
yanao
Agriculture (General)
S1-972
T. I. Nizamutdinov
A. R. Suleymanov
E. N. Morgun
An. V. Gusev
O. S. Tupakhina
Al. V. Gusev
A. V. Plekhanov
D. S. Tupakhin
E. V. Abakumov
Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
topic_facet postanthropogenic soil formation
cryosols
nutrients
heavy metals
arctic
yanao
Agriculture (General)
S1-972
description Soils of archaeological sites are highly interesting objects for multidisciplinary research in various fields of soil science, ecology, archaeology, anthropology and other sciences. Currently, the soils of archaeological sites in the Arctic regions have not been studied sufficiently, although many ancient monuments beyond the polar circle have been found. This work is devoted to the study of morphological and chemical properties of soils of the archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1”, which is located beyond the northern polar circle, near the cities of Labytnangi and Salekhard (Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug). Development of these territories (according to archaeological research) began in the Eneolithic (Late IV – III millennia BC) and continues to the present day. Soil types on the territory of the monument are represented by soil-like bodies (urbikvazizems), podzols, turbozems, urbo-agrozems and peat soils with inclusions of archaeological and anthropogenic artifacts dating back to the XX century. Most of the studied soils were previously subjected to the processes of cryoturbation, although at present the lower boundary of the active layer of permafrost lies at a depth of 120–130 cm, according to the conducted electrophysical sounding. Significant changes occurred in the acid-base properties of the studied soils. In addition, anthropogenic activity entailed the introduction of biophilic elements and organic matter into the soil profile, in particular phosphorus, which is concentrated in the urbanized soil horizons (phosphorus concentrations above 2 800 mg/kg were recorded). The concentrations of heavy metals in the soils are at/below the conventional background (vicinity of Salekhard and Labytnangi). However, some excess concentrations of copper (up to 87.5 mg/kg), zinc (up to 303.3 mg/kg), lead (up to 76.1 mg/kg), and cadmium (up to 2.1 mg/kg) in the urbanized soil horizons have been detected. According to the results of the work, we can conclude that the soils of the archaeological site were formed ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author T. I. Nizamutdinov
A. R. Suleymanov
E. N. Morgun
An. V. Gusev
O. S. Tupakhina
Al. V. Gusev
A. V. Plekhanov
D. S. Tupakhin
E. V. Abakumov
author_facet T. I. Nizamutdinov
A. R. Suleymanov
E. N. Morgun
An. V. Gusev
O. S. Tupakhina
Al. V. Gusev
A. V. Plekhanov
D. S. Tupakhin
E. V. Abakumov
author_sort T. I. Nizamutdinov
title Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
title_short Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
title_full Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
title_fullStr Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
title_full_unstemmed Soils of the polar archaeological site “Settlement Labytnangi 1 (Komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
title_sort soils of the polar archaeological site “settlement labytnangi 1 (komy village)”: morphological analysis and chemical composition
publisher V.V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108
https://doaj.org/article/780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d
genre nenets
Nenets Autonomous Okrug
permafrost
genre_facet nenets
Nenets Autonomous Okrug
permafrost
op_source Бюллетень Почвенного института им. В.В. Докучаева, Vol 0, Iss 114, Pp 66-108 (2023)
op_relation https://bulletin.esoil.ru/jour/article/view/730
https://doaj.org/toc/0136-1694
https://doaj.org/toc/2312-4202
0136-1694
2312-4202
doi:10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108
https://doaj.org/article/780f85e012d846f1a6b1d4fd90a4fc0d
op_doi https://doi.org/10.19047/0136-1694-2023-114-66-108
container_title Dokuchaev Soil Bulletin
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