Abstract

Charred materials (anthracomass) stored within a soil constitute a major part of its pyrogenic archive and could provide evidence of past fire events, both natural and anthropogenic. However, the dynamics of man-made contributions to the total anthracomass of soil at different time scales are insufficiently understood. In this study, we determined the anthracomass concentrations, stocks, and particle-size distribution in anthropogenically transformed soils of different genesis and ages. Materials were collected from the following archaeological sites within Central Russia—3 Upper Paleolithic sites (Avdeevo, Khotylevo-2 and Yudinovo-1), 2 Early Iron Age settlements (Khotylevo-2 and Yaroslavl), and 1 Medieval site (Yaroslavl). Samples from different cultural layers (CLs), plough layers, and native soils (control) were studied. We identified anthracomass accumulation over a wide chronological scale starting from the Upper Paleolithic Period. The high degree of preservation of anthracomass in ancient anthropogenically transformed soils was explained by the presence of large fragments of charred bones, which are more durable in comparison to wood charcoal. The anthracomass concentrations and stocks in the Early Iron Age plough layer were lower than those in the Medieval plough layer. CLs were generally more enriched in the anthracomass than plough layers, due to their sedimentational genesis, which is more favorable for anthracomass preservation than the turbational genesis of plough layers. However, the differences between charred particle sizes in synlithogenic CLs and turbational plough layers were less clear than expected, due to the specific conditions of formation of each particular layer, e.g., burial rate, duration of ploughing, and type of agricultural land use.

Highlights

  • Soils preserve large amounts of information related to past environmental conditions and anthropogenic pressures

  • Recent studies on the species composition and the particle-size distribution of charcoal assemblages allowed for determinations of wildfire frequency and tree species composition and dynamics [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

  • We found no direct relationship between the level of society development, the density of settlements, and the amount of pyrogenic material stored in cultural layers (CLs)

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Summary

Introduction

Soils preserve large amounts of information related to past environmental conditions and anthropogenic pressures. One aspect of the great diversity of such information is represented by the charred materials (anthracomass) of different genesis (wood and bone) that form the pyrogenic archive of soil. Recent studies on the species composition and the particle-size distribution of charcoal assemblages allowed for determinations of wildfire frequency and tree species composition and dynamics [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. Relationships between the content, genesis, and chronological dynamics of anthracomass were not yet investigated, until the present time. Geosciences 2021, 11, 165 content, genesis, and chronological dynamics of anthracomass were not yet investigated, untilThe the present aim of time.

Materials and Methods
Study Sites
Control Samples
Grouping of Sites
The Extraction of Anthracomass from Soil Samples
Charcoal Identification
Particle-Size Distribution of Anthracomass
Identification of Charred Materials
Anthracomass
Full Text
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