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A review of lessivage and neolithic cultivation in southern England
Authors:P.F. Fisher
Affiliation:1. The School of Geography, Kingston Polytechnic, Penrhyn Road, Kingston KT1 2EE, England
Abstract:A critical re-examination is undertaken of a model for soil development which has been put forward to explain the occurrence of buried sols lessivés (Argillic brown earths) under several neolithic earthworks in southern England. The model attributes the formation of sols lessivés to neolithic agricultural activity, and is based on the assumption that lessivage will not occur under woodland, but will be facilitated by clearance and cultivation. A review of the pedological literature shows both these assumptions to be unsubstantiated, and a survey of the sites used in the development of the model reveals that at only one is there any independent evidence for neolithic agriculture. An alternative hypothesis for sol lessivé development is put forward which associates it with the post-glacial forest. The original model was taken as an environmental cause of the change in the neolithic economic base. In view of the arguments presented here this explanation is no longer tenable.
Keywords:southern England  neolithic  pedogenesis  sol lessive  lessivage  buried soils  soil erosion  cultivation  soil degradation  argillic brown earth
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