Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps

Because of extensive Pleistocenic glaciations which erased most of the previously existing soils, slope steepness and climatic conditions favoring soil erosion, most soils observed on the Alps (and in other mid-latitude mountain ranges) developed only during the Holocene. However, in few sites, part...

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Main Authors: D'AMICO, MICHELE, CATONI, MARCELLA, BONIFACIO, Eleonora, ZANINI, Ermanno
Other Authors: D'Amico Michele, Catoni Marcella, Bonifacio Eleonora, Zanini Ermanno
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: European Geoscience Union 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1522813
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/EGU2015-14185.pdf
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spelling ftunivtorino:oai:iris.unito.it:2318/1522813 2023-10-09T21:55:14+02:00 Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps D'AMICO, MICHELE CATONI, MARCELLA BONIFACIO, Eleonora ZANINI, Ermanno D'Amico Michele Catoni Marcella Bonifacio Eleonora Zanini Ermanno 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1522813 http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/EGU2015-14185.pdf eng eng European Geoscience Union country:AUT place:Vienna ispartofbook:Geophysical Research Abstracts European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2015 volume:17 firstpage:14185 lastpage:14185 numberofpages:1 http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1522813 http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/EGU2015-14185.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2015 ftunivtorino 2023-09-12T22:28:33Z Because of extensive Pleistocenic glaciations which erased most of the previously existing soils, slope steepness and climatic conditions favoring soil erosion, most soils observed on the Alps (and in other mid-latitude mountain ranges) developed only during the Holocene. However, in few sites, particularly in the outermost sections of the Alpine range, Pleistocene glaciers covered only small and scattered surfaces because of the low altitude reached in the basins, and ancient soils could be preserved for long periods of time on particularly stable surfaces. In some cases, these soils retain good memories of past periglacial activity. We described and sampled soils on stable surfaces in the Upper Tanaro valley, Ligurian Alps (Southwestern Piemonte, Italy). The sampling sites were between 600 to 1600 m of altitude, under present day lower montane Castanea sativa/Ostrya carpinifolia forests, montane Fagus sylvatica and Pinus uncinata forests or montane heath/grazed grassland, on different quartzitic substrata. The surface morphology often showed strongly developed, fossil periglacial patterned ground forms, such as coarse stone circles on flat surfaces, or stone stripes on steeper slopes. The stone circles could be up to 5 m wide, while the sorted stripes could be as wide as 12-15 m. A strong lateral cryogenic textural sorting characterized the fine fraction too, with sand dominating close to the stone rims of the patterned ground features and silt and clay the central parts. The surface 60-120 cm of the soils were podzolized during the Holocene; as a result of the textural lateral sorting, the thickness of the podzolic E and Bs horizons varied widely across the patterns. The lower boundary of the Holocene Podzols was abrupt, and corresponded with dense layers with thick coarse laminar structure and illuvial silt accumulation (Cjj horizons). Dense Cjj diapiric inclusions were sometimes preserved in the central parts of the patterns. Where cover beds were developed, more superimposed podzol cycles were observed: ... Conference Object permafrost Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto)
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto)
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language English
description Because of extensive Pleistocenic glaciations which erased most of the previously existing soils, slope steepness and climatic conditions favoring soil erosion, most soils observed on the Alps (and in other mid-latitude mountain ranges) developed only during the Holocene. However, in few sites, particularly in the outermost sections of the Alpine range, Pleistocene glaciers covered only small and scattered surfaces because of the low altitude reached in the basins, and ancient soils could be preserved for long periods of time on particularly stable surfaces. In some cases, these soils retain good memories of past periglacial activity. We described and sampled soils on stable surfaces in the Upper Tanaro valley, Ligurian Alps (Southwestern Piemonte, Italy). The sampling sites were between 600 to 1600 m of altitude, under present day lower montane Castanea sativa/Ostrya carpinifolia forests, montane Fagus sylvatica and Pinus uncinata forests or montane heath/grazed grassland, on different quartzitic substrata. The surface morphology often showed strongly developed, fossil periglacial patterned ground forms, such as coarse stone circles on flat surfaces, or stone stripes on steeper slopes. The stone circles could be up to 5 m wide, while the sorted stripes could be as wide as 12-15 m. A strong lateral cryogenic textural sorting characterized the fine fraction too, with sand dominating close to the stone rims of the patterned ground features and silt and clay the central parts. The surface 60-120 cm of the soils were podzolized during the Holocene; as a result of the textural lateral sorting, the thickness of the podzolic E and Bs horizons varied widely across the patterns. The lower boundary of the Holocene Podzols was abrupt, and corresponded with dense layers with thick coarse laminar structure and illuvial silt accumulation (Cjj horizons). Dense Cjj diapiric inclusions were sometimes preserved in the central parts of the patterns. Where cover beds were developed, more superimposed podzol cycles were observed: ...
author2 D'Amico Michele
Catoni Marcella
Bonifacio Eleonora
Zanini Ermanno
format Conference Object
author D'AMICO, MICHELE
CATONI, MARCELLA
BONIFACIO, Eleonora
ZANINI, Ermanno
spellingShingle D'AMICO, MICHELE
CATONI, MARCELLA
BONIFACIO, Eleonora
ZANINI, Ermanno
Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
author_facet D'AMICO, MICHELE
CATONI, MARCELLA
BONIFACIO, Eleonora
ZANINI, Ermanno
author_sort D'AMICO, MICHELE
title Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
title_short Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
title_full Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
title_fullStr Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
title_full_unstemmed Pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the South-western Italian Alps
title_sort pleistocene permafrost features in soils in the south-western italian alps
publisher European Geoscience Union
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1522813
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/EGU2015-14185.pdf
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_relation ispartofbook:Geophysical Research Abstracts
European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2015
volume:17
firstpage:14185
lastpage:14185
numberofpages:1
http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1522813
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/EGU2015-14185.pdf
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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