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Soils and vegetation history of abandoned enclosures in the New Forest,Hampshire, England
Institution:1. Institute of Forest, Rural Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, 23897-005 Seropédica, RJ, Brazil;2. Department of Education, Federal University of Viçosa, 36570-900 Viçosa, MG, Brazil;3. Soil Department, Federal University of Viçosa, 36570-900 Viçosa, MG, Brazil;4. Soil and Agricultural Engineering Department, Federal University of Roraima, 69300-000 Boa Vista, RR, Brazil;5. Forestry Engineering Department, Federal University of Viçosa, 36570-900 Viçosa, MG, Brazil;1. Institute of Geography, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia;2. Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino, Moscow region, Russia;3. Belgorod State National Research University, Belgorod, Russia
Abstract:Soil profiles buried beneath earth banks of five abandoned enclosures, ranging in age from late Bronze Age to early 19th century AD, were compared with unburied profiles inside and outside the enclosures. Soil particle size analyses and micromorphological studies show that the banks were constructed of mixed topsoil and subsoil from adjacent ditches; on some banks the soil has begun to podzolize. At the two oldest sites (Dark Hat and Long Slade Bottom, which are late Bronze or Iron Age) the soils within the enclosures were homogenized, probably by occasional cultivation for cereal growing. At Dark Hat an ironpan has developed on the upper surface of a layer compacted by smearing during cultivation. The later enclosures, at Burley Moor (Anglo-Saxon), East Boldre (mediaeval) and Hatchet Gate (early 19th century AD), were probably used entirely for pasture. Pollen assemblages from the buried soils and overlying banks, and chemical comparisons of the buried soils with profiles inside and outside the enclosures together provide new evidence for a history of soil and vegetation changes over the past 2500–3500 years. Heathland vegetation associated with podzolic soils existed on plateau gravels before the late Bronze Age, but on other parent materials heath vegetation and acidic soils with incipient podzolization appeared only in later periods. The present patchy vegetation pattern of mainly deciduous woodland with open areas of ferny grassland and heath seems to have persisted since before the late Bronze Age. The most obvious human influences on the vegetation during the last 2000 years have been periodic temporary use of open areas and woodland clearings for protected grazing.
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