Abstract

During the Quaternary sedimentation in the southern part of the Caspian Lowland was influenced significantly by the Caspian Sea. This is expressed both in accumulation of marine/lagoon sediments as a result of transgressive phases, as well as erosion of sediments, which leads to an incompleteness in the geological record. The most detailed record of Later Quaternary sedimentation is found in the Lower Volga region, where a series of Caspian Sea transgressions, Volga River alluvium and loess-palaeosol series provide an excellent archive of the evolution of the climate and landscapes of the past. We have studied one of the reference sections, at Chernyy Yar, in which a series of major stages of regional sedimentations is recorded. Description of the Late Quaternary sediments and luminescence dating allowed us to obtain, for the first time, a detailed chronostratigraphy for the southern part of the Lower Volga. Our results show that the quartz OSL and feldspar pIRIR50,290 signals were sufficiently bleached before deposition and uncertainties in bleaching have a negligible impact on the reliability of the luminescence ages. The new luminescence chronology described here, based on quartz OSL and K-feldspar pIRIR290 ages, suggests five major stages during the Late Quaternary: (1) a stable alluvial sedimentation of the Volga River between 130 and 105 ka (MIS 5e/d), when the thick Chernyyar alluvial suite formed regionally during the Late Khazarian transgression of the Caspian Sea; (2) a stage when the retreat of the Khazarian transgression formed a very broad floodplain about 85 ka ago, and promoted Volga channel incision. New findings shows that the Atelian regression – a major event in the Late Quaternary of the Caspian Sea – began after ∼60 ka; (3) subaerial sedimentation during MIS 4 with evidence of cryogenic processes at ∼40 ka, reliably dated for the first time in this southern part of the East European Plain; (4) about 24 ka ago, the largest Late Quaternary Khvalynian transgression reached the Chernyy Yar; (5) after the subsequent regression at ∼14-15 ka some part of the marine record was eroded and the Holocene kastanozem soil formed.

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