The influence of historic land-use changes on hillslope erosion and sediment redistribution

Author:

Larsen Annegret123,Robin Vincent34,Heckmann Tobias5,Fülling Alexander6,Larsen Joshua R17,Bork Hans-Rudolf2

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Earth Surface Dynamics, University of Lausanne, Switzerland

2. Institute of Ecosystem Science and Geoarchaeology, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, Germany

3. Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscape’, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, Germany

4. Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire des Environnements Continentaux, Université de Lorraine, France

5. Physical Geography, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany

6. Geographisches Institut, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany

7. School of Geography, Planning, and Environmental Management, The University of Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Agricultural societies around the world have dramatically altered the natural landscape, particularly through accelerated soil erosion. The expansion of agricultural land use into steeper headwater areas during the Medieval period in central Europe is known to have caused large increases in soil erosion and sediment redistribution downstream. Although land-use practices changed and improved following this initial impact, it is currently unknown whether changes in land-use techniques also improved hillslope soil erosion and sediment redistribution rates. In this paper, we use a variety of techniques, including chrono-stratigraphy, wood charcoal analysis and a geostatistical model, to reconstruct land-use and erosion rates for the period spanning the Medieval Period to the present (1100–300 years ago) in a small headwater catchment in central Europe. Coupling land-use, hillslope erosion and sediment redistribution fluxes, we find the largest flux change occurs because of the initial deforestation at the beginning of the Medieval Period (1100 years ago). Following deforestation, we identified three main types of land-use techniques that were practised between ~1100 and 300 years ago: Horticulture, cropping agriculture and rotational birch silviculture, the last of which represents the earliest evidence for this practice found in central Europe to date. However, we find only small differences in hillslope fluxes throughout the catchment despite the variable land-use techniques employed. This is because the land-use techniques primarily influenced and increased the hillslope sediment storage capacity rather than erosion rates directly, which is an important distinction to consider for future work attempting to link changes in human land use and hillslope erosion.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archaeology,Global and Planetary Change

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