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Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium

Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium
Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium
Lynchets, often the defining component of historic agricultural landscapes in northern Europe, are generally associated with soft-limestone geologies and are particularly well developed on loess-mantled landscapes. To understand their formation and chronology, the authors present their geoarchaeological analyses of lynchet soils and loess deposits at Blick Mead and Charlton Forest in southern England, and Sint Martens-Voeren in Belgium. The lynchets date from the late prehistoric to the medieval periods and were constructed by plough action at the English sites, and by both cut-and-fill and ploughing in Belgium. This has resulted in the preservation of highly fertile loessic soils across chalk slopes, lost elsewhere. Although each example is associated with local/regional agricultural histories, the lynchets’ effective soil-retention capacities allowed them to survive as important heritage features with environmental benefits over millennia.
agricultural lynchets, historical land use, slope-sediment transfer, loess, luminescence dating
1461-9571
Pears, Ben
36d04a0f-6948-4e68-8f60-3a2a54d70bd0
Lang, Andreas
d4303581-0fa8-49f7-af61-0d27b7dc8d01
Fallu, Daniel
3f91622e-bf08-458c-beec-505bf161b20d
Roberts, Mark
bb708851-2a5e-4850-a957-0728e58ce098
Jacques, David
30905c0c-38eb-44cf-862e-61653543124e
Snape, Lisa
d7048da5-96fd-4a20-a3b6-35a04332b005
Bahl, Chiara
8a250247-9dd7-4178-b3c1-f28eaf6df8e3
Van Oost, Kristof
dc58926a-72e2-45b1-a285-62efb897e4f9
Zhao, Pengzhi
87f9e19d-29e1-4ec3-9c6c-b840babbe171
Tarolli, Paolo
d802bdcb-728a-435f-9bd9-d91e88c58089
Cucchiaro, Sara
3960143e-7433-4788-83f7-5caf9a4ff150
Walsh, Kevin
49b59f2e-360f-4f18-b651-ad778ff67e8e
Brown, Antony
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
et al.
Pears, Ben
36d04a0f-6948-4e68-8f60-3a2a54d70bd0
Lang, Andreas
d4303581-0fa8-49f7-af61-0d27b7dc8d01
Fallu, Daniel
3f91622e-bf08-458c-beec-505bf161b20d
Roberts, Mark
bb708851-2a5e-4850-a957-0728e58ce098
Jacques, David
30905c0c-38eb-44cf-862e-61653543124e
Snape, Lisa
d7048da5-96fd-4a20-a3b6-35a04332b005
Bahl, Chiara
8a250247-9dd7-4178-b3c1-f28eaf6df8e3
Van Oost, Kristof
dc58926a-72e2-45b1-a285-62efb897e4f9
Zhao, Pengzhi
87f9e19d-29e1-4ec3-9c6c-b840babbe171
Tarolli, Paolo
d802bdcb-728a-435f-9bd9-d91e88c58089
Cucchiaro, Sara
3960143e-7433-4788-83f7-5caf9a4ff150
Walsh, Kevin
49b59f2e-360f-4f18-b651-ad778ff67e8e
Brown, Antony
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab

Pears, Ben, Lang, Andreas and Fallu, Daniel , et al. (2024) Lynchet-Type Terraces, Loess and Agricultural Resilience on Chalk Landscapes in the UK and Belgium. European Journal of Archaeology. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Lynchets, often the defining component of historic agricultural landscapes in northern Europe, are generally associated with soft-limestone geologies and are particularly well developed on loess-mantled landscapes. To understand their formation and chronology, the authors present their geoarchaeological analyses of lynchet soils and loess deposits at Blick Mead and Charlton Forest in southern England, and Sint Martens-Voeren in Belgium. The lynchets date from the late prehistoric to the medieval periods and were constructed by plough action at the English sites, and by both cut-and-fill and ploughing in Belgium. This has resulted in the preservation of highly fertile loessic soils across chalk slopes, lost elsewhere. Although each example is associated with local/regional agricultural histories, the lynchets’ effective soil-retention capacities allowed them to survive as important heritage features with environmental benefits over millennia.

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EJA 577 Main Text Accepted Edit 13.02.24 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 February 2024
Keywords: agricultural lynchets, historical land use, slope-sediment transfer, loess, luminescence dating

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489217
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489217
ISSN: 1461-9571
PURE UUID: 570b32f9-a703-4275-9dae-fe443b56b2e9
ORCID for Antony Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1990-4654

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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2024 16:32
Last modified: 19 Apr 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Ben Pears
Author: Andreas Lang
Author: Daniel Fallu
Author: Mark Roberts
Author: David Jacques
Author: Lisa Snape
Author: Chiara Bahl
Author: Kristof Van Oost
Author: Pengzhi Zhao
Author: Paolo Tarolli
Author: Sara Cucchiaro
Author: Kevin Walsh
Author: Antony Brown ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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