Abstract

The presence of lamellae (or bands) often promises an interesting sedimentary archive related to the occupation or abandonment history of a site. How exactly might such types of bands be interpreted, and how do their presence change the original primary features preserved within the archaeological structure? For this review, two archaeological sites are introduced, both distinct in many aspects, located in di erent climatic regions, but with the presence of bands preserved inside of the in ll, as well as in the locality’s background. One site is related to the Magdalenian/Epigravettian occupation in south-western Poland, and the second related to the Neolithic occupation in central Bohemia. What connect these two localities are their permeable sandy background, presence of human occupation, and the development of the above-described textural features. Sedimentological observations supported by micromorphology and geochemistry, as well as by magnetic susceptibility, revealed that, in both localities, the presence of dark brown bands was the result of repeated illuviation due to a kind of podsolization process not necessarily related to human presence. The illuvial lamellae/bands at the Kly site probably originated during the Subboreal due to the increased humidity connected with the presence of the disturbed background of the in ll in the ditch. The Sowin site displays, at the very least, two phases of origin. One of the phases is pre-dated by glacial conditions, and the second is of late glacial or Holocene origin. The origin of these features in both study sites is due to precipitated water and the movement of clay down the section, but under their di erent conditions.

Highlights

  • The presence of bands within the sedimentary/pedological record has been of interest to different pedologists since the beginning of the twentieth century

  • Several of the best-developed examples of soils with illuvial bands described in Holocene soils are the humic podzols of the European Aeolian Sand Belt (Koster, 2009)

  • This paper aims to review the possible formation processes that lead to the origin of illuvial bands and, in addition, how micromorphology and geochemistry methodological tools may help with interpreting these formation processes

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Summary

Introduction

The presence of bands within the sedimentary/pedological record has been of interest to different pedologists since the beginning of the twentieth century. The most common term for these laminated textural features are illuvial bands, but names such as pseudofibres, lamellas, laminae, clay-iron bands or covarvany, are used in different references (see review, Prusinkiewicz et al, 1998 and Kühn et al, 2011), or, according to the US Soil Survey Staff (1999), a lamella. A textural feature called a lamella (plural lamellae; band) can develop as an illuvial horizon with a thickness Online First. IANSA 2019 ● X/1 ● Online First Lenka Lisá, Aleš Bajer, Klement Rejšek, Valerie Vranová, Lenka Vejrostová, Andrzej Wisniewski, Petr Krištuf: Review of Illuvial Bands Origin; What Might the Presence of Dark Brown Bands in Sandy Infillings of Archaeological Objects or Cultural Layers Mean?. What is the process whereby the illuvial bands develop? Several of the best-developed examples of soils with illuvial bands described in Holocene (as well as Pleistocene) soils are the humic podzols of the European Aeolian Sand Belt (Koster, 2009). Gerasimova and Khitrov (2012) classified similar soils located in glacifluvial sand in south western Poland.

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