Reconstruction of Climate, Soils, and Vegetation in the Turan–Uyuk Basin of South Siberia at the Beginning of the Subatlantic Period of the Holocene
- 作者: Prikhodko V.E.1, Blyakharchuk T.A.2, Kilunovskaya M.E.3
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隶属关系:
- Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems of Soil Science
- Institute of Monitoring of Climatic and Ecologic Systems, Siberian Branch
- Institute for the History of Material Culture
- 期: 卷 51, 编号 8 (2018)
- 页面: 865-879
- 栏目: Genesis and Geography of Soils
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/1064-2293/article/view/224632
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1064229318080100
- ID: 224632
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详细
Four Scythian kurgans of the burial site Beloe Lake-3 were studied in the Turan–Uyuk Depression in the Republic of Tyva. They were constructed about 2565–2390 calendar years ago (calibrated with deviation 1 σ). Soil formation after 2500 yrs of the construction of the kurgans was examined in the interkurgan area. The properties of the background surface and ancient buried soils have much in common, and the difference between the soils of the four kurgans is small. This attests to the fact that the paleoclimatic conditions in the period of the necropolis construction remained stable and were similar to the modern climatic conditions. According to palynological data, the climate at the stage of the construction of the first two kurgans was a little more humid in comparison with the modern climate; it became somewhat drier after 95 years, during the construction of the third kurgan (2425 cal. BP) and again tended to humidification at the final stage of the necropolis creation. These changes in the paleoclimatic conditions are indicated by variations in the structure and composition of associations of xerophytes, mesophytes, hydrophytes, and ruderal plants. At the Uyuk stage, the area was mainly occupied by steppe phytocenoses with a predominance of xerophytes over mesophytes, and hydrophilous vegetation was allocated to moistened habitats near water reservoirs. Larch forests grew near water bodies. The variable anthropogenic impact on the landscape was stronger at the initial and final stages of the construction of the Uyuk culture necropolis.
作者简介
V. Prikhodko
Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems of Soil Science
编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: valprikhodko@rambler.ru
俄罗斯联邦, Pushchino, Moscow oblast, 142290
T. Blyakharchuk
Institute of Monitoring of Climatic and Ecologic Systems, Siberian Branch
Email: valprikhodko@rambler.ru
俄罗斯联邦, Tomsk, 634055
M. Kilunovskaya
Institute for the History of Material Culture
Email: valprikhodko@rambler.ru
俄罗斯联邦, St. Petersburg, 191186
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