Abstract

Attersee represents a good example of a lake situated in the Northern forelands of the Northern Calcareous Alps and influenced by different sediment-supplying processes during the postglacial. Several compounds, of different origin, form the sediments of the basin. Clastics which are mainly composed of dolomites derive from the Northern Calcareous Alps. Clastic input of organic and inorganic particles is accomplished by rivers and landslides. They are responsible for the main input of siliciclasts like quartz, feldspar and mica. A high proportion of the sediment results from autochthonous biogenic carbonate precipitation. In the shallow sublittoral areas of the northern part of the lake benthic decalcification caused by encrusting macroand micro-phytes is dominant, while in the southern and central parts of the lake epilimnetic decalcification caused by the blooming of phytoplancton is more important during summer. The total biogenic calcium carbonate production reaches about 11 000 to 12 000 metric tons a year.

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