Abstract

The density of gully network in the Suwałki Lakeland (northeastern Poland) with typical last-glaciation relief is 0.2 km/km 2 on average and locally reaches 1.2 km/km 2. Most gullies are isolated but sporadically they create dendritic patterns. The larger gullies are developed along dellies (bowl-shaped, dry valleys) or melt-out valleys. The smaller and shorter gullies occur on the slopes of melt-out depressions and tunnel valleys. Ages of peat covered by fans at the mouths of larger gullies indicate that gully erosion started between 3520 ± 70 to 2240 ± 100 BP. Two different units build the fans and infilled the gullies. The older unit in the lower part of fans is up to 5 m thick, contains sand and gravel that generally originated from the bottom and bank erosion of the gullies and resembles alluvium. The younger unit, about 2–3 m thick, consists of colluvium. The fans at the mouths of smaller and shorter gullies are mainly built of colluvium. The maximal grain diameter in both units is similar, which testifies to a similar intensity of extreme rainfalls. The analysed sediments have different characteristics, which indicate that the source material and depositional changes are linked to forest clearance and farmland expansion starting in the 7th century AD and continuing in the Middle Ages.

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