Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess, and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35086Dato
2024-04-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Pears, Ben; Lang, Andreas; Fallu, Daniel Joseph; Roberts, Mark; Jacques, David; Snape, Lisa; Bahl, Chiara; Oost, Kristof V.A.N.; Zhao, Pengzhi; Tarolli, Paolo; Cucchiaro, Sara; Walsh, Kevin; Brown, Antony GavinSammendrag
Lynchets, often the defining component of historic agricultural landscapes in northern Europe, are generally associated with soft-limestone geologies and are particularly well developed on loess-mantled landscapes. To understand their formation and chronology, the authors present their geoarchaeological analyses of lynchet soils and loess deposits at Blick Mead and Charlton Forest in southern England, and Sint Martens-Voeren in Belgium. The lynchets date from the late prehistoric to the medieval periods and were constructed by plough action at the English sites, and by both cut-and-fill and ploughing in Belgium. This has resulted in the preservation of highly fertile loessic soils across chalk slopes, lost elsewhere. Although each example is associated with local/regional agricultural histories, the lynchets’ effective soil-retention capacities allowed them to survive as important heritage features with environmental benefits over millennia.
Forlag
Cambridge University PressSitering
Pears, Lang, Fallu, Roberts, Jacques, Snape, Bahl, Oost, Zhao, Tarolli, Cucchiaro, Walsh, Brown. Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess, and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium. European Journal of Archaeology. 2024Metadata
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