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18 pages, 6894 KB  
Article
The Provenance of Fine-Grained Sediments from the Central Basin Fault Rift, West Philippine Sea: Insights into the Input of Asian Aeolian Dust
by Zi-Shan Zhang, Chong-Jin Pang and Bryan Krapež
Minerals 2026, 16(6), 590; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16060590 - 1 Jun 2026
Viewed by 159
Abstract
The Central Basin Fault Rift (CBFR) is a key area for studying deep-sea sedimentation and paleoclimate, yet its sedimentary process and provenance and their links to geological and climatic changes remain poorly understood. This study therefore conducted systematically sedimentological, mineralogical and geochemical analyses [...] Read more.
The Central Basin Fault Rift (CBFR) is a key area for studying deep-sea sedimentation and paleoclimate, yet its sedimentary process and provenance and their links to geological and climatic changes remain poorly understood. This study therefore conducted systematically sedimentological, mineralogical and geochemical analyses of sediments in core ZK06 from the CBFR to address the above question. The results show that the sediments are dominated by silt and clay, with multiple graded rhythms related to gravity flows. Provenance analysis shows that the sediments are composed primarily of proximal andesitic volcaniclastic detritus, with additional Asian aeolian dust and minor authigenic components. It is recognized that the proportion of Asian aeolian dust increases from the lower to medium part of the sediment sequence but decreases in the upper part, which may correspond to the input history of Asian aeolian dust in the West Philippine Basin during the late Pleistocene to Holocene. This study therefore provides not only new insights into sedimentary processes and the provenance of sediments but also the input history of the Asian aeolian dust in central CBFR. Full article
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38 pages, 5412 KB  
Article
Benthic Foraminifera Fauna from the Central Yellow Sea Mud (CYSM): New Regional Records and Environmental Implications Since the Late Pleistocene
by Hyun Ju Ha, Dong-Hyeok Shin, Byung-Cheol Kum, Jeong Won Kang, Don-Hyug Kang and Joon Sang Park
Diversity 2026, 18(6), 323; https://doi.org/10.3390/d18060323 - 29 May 2026
Viewed by 673
Abstract
Benthic foraminifera are widely used as indicators of marine environmental conditions due to their sensitivity to ecological changes and their excellent preservation in sediments. In this study, benthic foraminiferal assemblages from a sediment core collected in the central Yellow Sea were investigated to [...] Read more.
Benthic foraminifera are widely used as indicators of marine environmental conditions due to their sensitivity to ecological changes and their excellent preservation in sediments. In this study, benthic foraminiferal assemblages from a sediment core collected in the central Yellow Sea were investigated to document faunal composition and examine temporal changes since the Late Pleistocene. A total of 54 benthic foraminiferal species belonging to 33 genera, 25 families, seven orders, three classes, and one phylum were identified. Among them, 12 species are newly recorded in Korean waters, reflecting the current incompleteness of regional faunal inventories and the importance of detailed taxonomic studies. The assemblages exhibit distinct stratigraphic variations. The lower interval (>30 ka) is characterized by low-diversity assemblages dominated by taxa commonly associated with marginal marine environments. The middle interval (ca. 20–25 ka) shows the occurrence of taxa typically reported from boreal to subarctic environments, suggesting changes in environmental conditions during the Last Glacial Maximum. In contrast, the upper interval (Holocene) is marked by increased species diversity and the dominance of taxa characteristic of normal marine shelf environments. These assemblage changes are interpreted as reflecting long-term responses of benthic communities to sea-level fluctuations, sedimentary conditions, and regional oceanographic variability in the Yellow Sea. In particular, the development of fine-grained deposits in the Central Yellow Sea Mud (CYSM) and the establishment of stable marine shelf conditions during the Holocene likely played important roles in shaping benthic habitats. This study provides new baseline data on benthic foraminiferal diversity in the Yellow Sea and demonstrates the potential of these assemblages as useful, though indirect, indicators for reconstructing past environmental changes. The results highlight the importance of integrating detailed taxonomic analyses with stratigraphic records to improve our understanding of marine biodiversity and paleoenvironmental variability in marginal seas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Marine Diversity)
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23 pages, 5049 KB  
Article
Late Glacial Fluvial Transitions and Holocene Peat Accumulation: A High-Resolution Stratigraphic Study from the Eastern Great Hungarian Plain
by Tamás Zsolt Vári, Pál Sümegi and Elemér Pál-Molnár
Soil Syst. 2026, 10(5), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems10050060 - 21 May 2026
Viewed by 648
Abstract
This study presents a high-resolution, multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of the Tövises fen at Pocsaj, Hungary, utilising lithostratigraphical, geochemical, malacological, and palynological analyses supported by radiocarbon dating. The sedimentary sequence documents the transition from a Late Glacial fluvial system (c. 19,000–16,000 cal BP) to [...] Read more.
This study presents a high-resolution, multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of the Tövises fen at Pocsaj, Hungary, utilising lithostratigraphical, geochemical, malacological, and palynological analyses supported by radiocarbon dating. The sedimentary sequence documents the transition from a Late Glacial fluvial system (c. 19,000–16,000 cal BP) to a cut-off meander and subsequent oxbow lake, eventually evolving into a peat-forming fen. Malacological and palynological data reveal the co-occurrence of cold-tolerant Late Pleistocene elements and the early appearance of thermomesophilous taxa at the onset of the Holocene. This suggests that the favourable microclimate of the adjacent loess-covered high bank and the humid alluvial plain functioned as a cryptic refugium for temperate broad-leaved trees and associated fauna during the Late Glacial. Anthropogenic impact is traceable from the Mesolithic, characterised by Corylus management, intensifying through Neolithic agriculture to a peak during the Roman Imperial Period. Geochemical markers in the upper peat sequence reflect increased biomass and medieval habitation, while recent malacofaunal shifts indicate progressive desiccation. Despite modern drainage attempts, the Tövises fen remains a biodiversity hotspot of high conservation value, preserving relict wetland communities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Peatlands: Properties, Values and Recent Advances)
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35 pages, 4428 KB  
Article
New Insights into Mousterian Faunal Assemblages from Uluzzo C (Apulia, Southern Italy)
by Angelica Fiorillo, Silvia Irina Monterrosa Preziosi, Sara Silvestrini, Lisa Brotons, Gruppo Speleologico Neretino, Enza Elena Spinapolice, Omry Barzilai, Francesco Berna, Adriana Moroni, Matteo Romandini, Gabriele Terlato and Stefano Benazzi
Quaternary 2026, 9(3), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9030037 - 8 May 2026
Viewed by 1276
Abstract
Grotta-Riparo di Uluzzo C (Uluzzo Bay, Apulia, southern Italy) preserves a long and complex stratigraphic sequence spanning from the Middle Palaeolithic to the Bronze Age, offering a valuable context for investigating depositional dynamics and human–environment interactions during the Late Pleistocene. Although recent multidisciplinary [...] Read more.
Grotta-Riparo di Uluzzo C (Uluzzo Bay, Apulia, southern Italy) preserves a long and complex stratigraphic sequence spanning from the Middle Palaeolithic to the Bronze Age, offering a valuable context for investigating depositional dynamics and human–environment interactions during the Late Pleistocene. Although recent multidisciplinary research has substantially advanced knowledge of the Uluzzian occupations, the Mousterian faunal record of the site has remained largely unexplored from zooarchaeological and taphonomic perspectives. This study examines the faunal assemblages from the Mousterian layers (E, F, and G), integrating material from historical excavations with those recovered during recent fieldwork. Zooarchaeological, taphonomic, and Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry (ZooMS) analyses are combined to reconstruct local environmental conditions, evaluate the relative contribution of human and non-human agents to bone accumulation, and assess patterns of site use and deposit formation. The faunal spectrum indicates an ecologically heterogeneous landscape, consistent with a Mediterranean refugial setting during the Late Pleistocene. Taphonomic evidence points to complex and cumulative formation processes resulting from repeated, short-term human occupations interspersed with carnivore activity and natural depositional processes. The Mousterian deposits are therefore best interpreted as brief palimpsests rather than the result of continuous or intensive occupation. Placed within a regional framework, the Uluzzo C assemblages contribute to broader discussions on site formation processes and environmental variability in southern Italy and provide an important comparative baseline for the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic period. Full article
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27 pages, 82949 KB  
Article
Unveiling the Unknown Gela Coastal Paleoenvironments (Sicily Island, Southern Italy) During Late Holocene: New Tools for the Greek Harbour Site Location
by Giuseppe Aiello, Vincenzo Amato, Diana Barra, Emanuele Colica, Sebastiano D’Amico, Roberta Parisi, Antonella Santostefano and Grazia Spagnolo
Heritage 2026, 9(1), 41; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9010041 - 22 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1404
Abstract
The ancient city of Gela (built in the 7th century BCE) is located in the southern sector of the Sicily Island (Southern Italy) on a Pleistocene marine terrace near the mouth of the Gela River. Gela was one of the most important Greek [...] Read more.
The ancient city of Gela (built in the 7th century BCE) is located in the southern sector of the Sicily Island (Southern Italy) on a Pleistocene marine terrace near the mouth of the Gela River. Gela was one of the most important Greek colonies in the Mediterranean Sea, strategically positioned at the crossroads of the major maritime trade routes and with a rich production of cereals thanks to the fertile Gela River alluvial plain. To reconstruct the coastal and environmental configuration during the Greek period and to improve the understanding of the location of the harbour basin, a multidisciplinary approach was applied to a sector of the Gela River alluvial–coastal plain. This area, located very close to the ancient city, is known as Conca (Italian for “Basin”) and was identified through the analysis of historical and modern maps as well as aerial photographs. The multidisciplinary approach includes geomorphology (derived from maps and aerial photos), stratigraphy (boreholes and archeological trench), paleoecology (ostracoda, foraminifera and fossil contents of selected layers), geochronology (14C dating of selected organic materials) and archeology (historical sources and maps, pottery fragments extracted from boreholes and trench layers). The main results show that this area was occupied by lower shoreface environments in the time intervals between 4.4 and 2.8 ka, which progressively transitioned to upper shoreface environments until the Greek age. During the Roman period, these environments were significantly reduced due to repeated alluvial sedimentation of the Gela River transforming the area into fluvial–marshy environments. A time interval of aeolian sand deposition was recorded in the upper part of the coastal stratigraphical succession, which can be related to climatic conditions with high aridity. Available data show that marine environments persisted in the Conca sector during the Greek age, allowing hypothesizing the presence of an ancient harbour in this area. The depth of the Greek age marine environments is estimated to be between 4.5 and 7 m below the current ground level. Further investigation, mainly based on geophysical and stratigraphical methods, will be planned aimed at identifying the presence of buried archeological targets. Full article
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27 pages, 10128 KB  
Article
Late Pleistocene to Holocene Depositional Environments in Foredeep Basins: Coastal Plain Responses to Sea-Level and Tectonic Forcing—The Metaponto Area (Southern Italy)
by Agostino Meo and Maria Rosaria Senatore
Geosciences 2026, 16(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences16010005 - 20 Dec 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1098
Abstract
The Metaponto coastal plain (Ionian margin, Southern Italy) records the Late Pleistocene–Holocene evolution of a foredeep coastal system shaped by relative sea-level change, vertical land motion, and compaction. We analyze a 22 m continuous core (Meta 1) using lithofacies logging, grain size statistics [...] Read more.
The Metaponto coastal plain (Ionian margin, Southern Italy) records the Late Pleistocene–Holocene evolution of a foredeep coastal system shaped by relative sea-level change, vertical land motion, and compaction. We analyze a 22 m continuous core (Meta 1) using lithofacies logging, grain size statistics and cumulative curves, multivariate analysis of grain size distributions (PCA and k-means clustering), and three AMS 14C ages, and we compare the record with a nearby borehole (MSB) and a global eustatic curve. Four depositional units document a shift from lower-shoreface–offshore deposition to lagoon–barrier/aeolian systems, culminating in late Holocene near-surface progradation. Textural end members (mud-rich offshore/lagoonal, traction-dominated, and sand-rich) are coherent across classical parameters, Visher-type curves, PCA, and k-means clusters. Depth–age comparisons suggest net uplift during the Late Glacial, followed by near-present relative sea level and a Late Holocene onset of modest net subsidence; a compaction contribution is plausible but unquantified. Subsidence/uplift rates therefore remain upper-bound estimates owing to sparse chronological control and the lack of glacio-isostatic and compaction modeling. Together with the MSB emerged-beach tie-point, the record constrains shoreline position and progradation. The inferred Mid- to Late-Holocene stabilization and progradational trends are consistent with other Italian and wider Mediterranean coastal plains. Additional dating and quantitative paleoecological proxies (e.g., foraminifera/ostracods/molluscs) are key to independently constrain salinity and water-depth changes and to refine the partitioning between subsidence and compaction. Full article
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23 pages, 15702 KB  
Article
Provenance of Wushan Loess in the Yangtze Three Gorges Region: Insights from Detrital Zircon U-Pb Geochronology and Late Pleistocene East Asian Monsoon Variations
by Xulong Hu, Yufen Zhang, Chang’an Li, Guoqing Li, Juxiang Liu, Yawei Li, Jianchao Su and Mingming Jia
Minerals 2025, 15(11), 1180; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15111180 - 9 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1109
Abstract
The Wushan Loess, situated in the Yangtze Three Gorges region of China, represents the southernmost aeolian loess deposit in China and provides critical insights into Late Pleistocene paleoenvironmental conditions and East Asian monsoon dynamics. Despite its significance, the genesis and provenance of this [...] Read more.
The Wushan Loess, situated in the Yangtze Three Gorges region of China, represents the southernmost aeolian loess deposit in China and provides critical insights into Late Pleistocene paleoenvironmental conditions and East Asian monsoon dynamics. Despite its significance, the genesis and provenance of this unique loess deposit remain controversial. This study employs an integrated multi-proxy approach combining detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, and detailed grain size analysis to systematically investigate the provenance and depositional mechanisms of the Wushan Loess. Three representative loess–paleosol profiles (Gaotang-GT, Badong-BD, and Zigui-ZG) were analyzed, yielding 17 OSL ages, 729 grain size measurements, and approximately 420 analyses per profile were conducted, yielding 1189 valid ages (GT 406, BD 391, ZG 402). OSL chronology constrains the deposition period to 18–103 ka (Marine Isotope Stages 2–5), coinciding with enhanced East Asian winter monsoon activity during the Last Glacial period. Grain size analysis reveals a dominant silt fraction (modal size: 20–25 μm) characteristic of aeolian transport, with coarse silt (20–63 μm) averaging 47.1% and fine silt (<20 μm) averaging 44.2% of the sediments. Detrital zircon U-Pb age spectra exhibit consistent major peaks at 200–220 Ma, 450–500 Ma, 720–780 Ma, and 1800–1850 Ma across all profiles. Kernel Density Estimation (KDE) and Multi-Dimensional Scaling (MDS) analyses indicate a mixed provenance model. Non-negative least squares (NNLS) unmixing confirms this quantitative source apportionment., dominated by proximal contributions from the upper Yangtze River basin (including the Three Gorges area and Sichuan Basin, ~65%–70%), supplemented by distal dust input from the Loess Plateau and northern Chinese deserts (~30%–35%). This study establishes for the first time a proximal-dominated provenance model for the Wushan Loess, providing new evidence for understanding southern Chinese loess formation mechanisms and Late Pleistocene East Asian monsoon evolution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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22 pages, 30819 KB  
Article
Late Holocene Abrupt Changes in the Fluvial Dynamics of the Tiber Valley Catchment (Rome, Italy): An Impact of the 4.2 Event?
by Fabrizio Marra, Carlo Rosa and Fabio Florindo
Quaternary 2025, 8(4), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8040059 - 23 Oct 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1673
Abstract
In the present work, we investigate the post-glacial aggradation of three tributary valleys draining the left hydrographic basin of the Tiber River in central Rome: the Murcia, Caffarella, and Grottaperfetta valleys. We describe the Upper Pleistocene–Holocene stratigraphic record of the alluvial successions occurring [...] Read more.
In the present work, we investigate the post-glacial aggradation of three tributary valleys draining the left hydrographic basin of the Tiber River in central Rome: the Murcia, Caffarella, and Grottaperfetta valleys. We describe the Upper Pleistocene–Holocene stratigraphic record of the alluvial successions occurring in the Caffarella Valley through the core data collected in a dedicatedly performed 35 m deep borehole. We provide seven 14C age constraints to the sediment aggradation which allow us to make a comparison with the Grottaperfetta and Murcia valleys, for which we present previously unpublished borehole data, and with the Tiber River Valley investigated in the previous literature. In particular, we highlight the effects of a mid-Holocene (5200–3800 yr BP) erosional phase, partially overlapping with the global 4.2 ka cooling/drying event, and we discuss the possible occurrence of a sea level fluctuation linked with this paleoclimatic event which has not been detected so far by other sedimentary records. Finally, we provide evidence for the widespread occurrence of a 6th century BCE (2550–2450 yr BP) overflooding phase that was previously observed only in the eastern portion of the Tiber River Valley in central Rome, which we suggest may be originated by concurrent intensive deforestation activity in central Italy. Full article
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35 pages, 13854 KB  
Article
Middle Paleolithic Neanderthal Open-Air Camp and Hyena Den Westeregeln (D)—Competition for Prey in a Mammoth Steppe Environment of Northern Germany (Central Europe)
by Cajus G. Diedrich
Quaternary 2025, 8(4), 52; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8040052 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 2023
Abstract
A gypsum karst sinkhole at Westeregeln (north-central Germany) was filled during the Late Pleistocene, first by fluvial flooding, then by solifluctation, and finally with wind-transported loess. Pleistocene mollusks and bones of snakes, birds, micro- and macromammals, and hyena coprolites were accumulated, often mixed [...] Read more.
A gypsum karst sinkhole at Westeregeln (north-central Germany) was filled during the Late Pleistocene, first by fluvial flooding, then by solifluctation, and finally with wind-transported loess. Pleistocene mollusks and bones of snakes, birds, micro- and macromammals, and hyena coprolites were accumulated, often mixed in gravel or sand layers with Middle Paleolithic artifacts, whereas ice wedges reach deep into the sinkhole. The high amount of small flint debris prove on-site tool production by using 99% local Saalian transported brownish-to-dark Upper Cretaceous flint, which could have been collected from the Bode River gravels near-site. Only a single quartzite and one jasper flake prove other local gravel sources or importation. A large bifacial flaked knife of layer 4 dates to the early/middle Weichselian/Wuermian (MIS 5-4), similar to two triangular handaxes in the MTA tradition and an absolutely dated woolly rhinoceros bone (50,310 + 1580/−1320 BP). A cold period of Late Pleistocene glacial mammoth steppe megafauna is represented, but the material is mostly strongly fragmented and smashed by humans. Neanderthal camp use on the gypsum hill is indicated also by small charcoal pieces, burned bone fragments, and fire-dehydrated flint fragments. Crocuta crocuta spelaea (Goldfuss) hyenas are well known from Westeregeln, with an open-air commuting den site, which was marked with feces. Full article
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21 pages, 19080 KB  
Article
Provenance Evolution Since the Middle Pleistocene in the Western Bohai Sea, North China: Integrated Rare Earth Element Geochemistry and Sedimentological Records
by Shuyu Wu, Jun Liu and Yongcai Feng
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(9), 1632; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13091632 - 26 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1849
Abstract
Despite extensive research on sediment provenance in the Bohai Sea (BS), a significant knowledge gap persists concerning long-term provenance evolution, particularly in the western BS since the Middle Pleistocene. This shortcoming limits reconstructions of paleoenvironmental evolution and its interplay with climatic variability and [...] Read more.
Despite extensive research on sediment provenance in the Bohai Sea (BS), a significant knowledge gap persists concerning long-term provenance evolution, particularly in the western BS since the Middle Pleistocene. This shortcoming limits reconstructions of paleoenvironmental evolution and its interplay with climatic variability and sea-level fluctuations. This study presents integrated Rare Earth Element (REE) geochemical and sedimentological analyses of sediments from core DZQ01 in the western BS. The mean ΣREE concentration of 178.78 μg/g is characterized by pronounced light REE (LREE) enrichment relative to heavy REE (HREE). Chondrite- and upper continental crust (UCC)-normalized patterns exhibit distinct negative Eu anomalies, variable Ce anomalies, marked LREE enrichment, and pronounced LREE/HREE fractionation. Grain size exerts the dominant control on REE distribution, whereas the weak correlation between HREE fractionation parameter indices (e.g., Gd/Yb) and redox-sensitive proxies (e.g., δEuUCC and δCeUCC) confirms their fidelity as provenance indicators. When integrated with the δEuUCC-δCeUCC diagram, discriminant functions, and paleoenvironmental proxies (Rb/Sr and Mg/Ca ratios), the data indicate that, during interglacial highstands, the Yellow River (YR) was the principal source, delivering fine-grained terrigenous material from the Loess Plateau and thereby elevating REE concentrations. Conversely, glacial lowstands shifted the depositional environment to subaerial conditions, with the YR, Hai River, and Luan River supplying a coarse-fine admixture. Multi-river provenance and dilution by coarse detritus collectively lowered REE concentrations during these intervals. Full article
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50 pages, 9189 KB  
Article
Insular Mid-Pleistocene Giant Rats from the So’a Basin (Flores, Indonesia)
by Susan Hayes, Gerrit D. van den Bergh, Indra Sutisna, Halmi Insani, Unggul P. Wibowo, Ruly Setiawan, Iwan Kurniawan and Samuel T. Turvey
Quaternary 2025, 8(3), 44; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8030044 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 2984
Abstract
Excavations undertaken at Mata Menge, the securely dated Middle Pleistocene open site on the Indonesian island of Flores, have resulted in the recovery of over 670 well-preserved fossil murine molars from two distinct stratigraphic intervals. This research is the first systematic metric and [...] Read more.
Excavations undertaken at Mata Menge, the securely dated Middle Pleistocene open site on the Indonesian island of Flores, have resulted in the recovery of over 670 well-preserved fossil murine molars from two distinct stratigraphic intervals. This research is the first systematic metric and morphological analysis of this material, with the results indicating the predominance of a single murine species, though the finds from the lower interval (0.7 million years ago) are for the most part significantly smaller than those recovered from the ~70,000-year-younger upper interval. Comparison of our findings with the analyses of the Flores endemic recent and fossil giant rats undertaken by Hooijer in 1957 and Musser in 1981 indicates the Mata Menge large murine maxillary molars, and, in particular, those from the lower interval are very similar to the limited Middle Pleistocene material Musser designated to be Hooijeromys nusatenggara. However, the associated Mata Menge mandibular molars are most similar to, though smaller than, the mid-Holocene Papagomys theodorverhoeveni. In addition to providing a detailed reference for future studies of large fossil murines excavated from Wallacea, our findings indicate Musser’s reassignment of Hooijer’s maxillary holotype of P. verhoeveni to P. armandvillei would benefit from re-examination. Full article
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12 pages, 2703 KB  
Article
Holocene Climate Shifts Driving Black Soil Formation in NE China: Palynology and AMS14C Dating Insights
by Hongwen Zhang, Haiwei Song, Xiangxi Lv, Wenlong Pang, Wenjun Pang, Xin Li, Yingxue Li and Jiliang Shao
Quaternary 2025, 8(3), 41; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8030041 - 31 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1326
Abstract
In this study, 14 palynological samples and nine AMS 14C dating samples were collected from two representative black soil profiles in the Xingkai Lake Plain to examine climate changes and their impacts on environmental evolution since the Holocene. The systematic identification, analysis, [...] Read more.
In this study, 14 palynological samples and nine AMS 14C dating samples were collected from two representative black soil profiles in the Xingkai Lake Plain to examine climate changes and their impacts on environmental evolution since the Holocene. The systematic identification, analysis, and research of palynological data reveal that the black soil profiles in the Xingkai Lake Plain can be categorized into the following three distinct palynological assemblage zones: the lower zone (11.7–7.5 ka BP) is characterized by Pinus-Laevgatomonoleti-Amaranthaceae-Artemisia, having a cold, dry climate; the middle zone (7.5–2.5 ka BP) features Quercus-Juglans-Polygonum-Cyperaceae, with a warm and humid climate; and the upper zone (2.5 ka BP to present) consists of Pinus-Quercus-Betula, indicating a cold and dry climate. Furthermore, field lithostratigraphic observations of the two black soil profiles suggest that late Pleistocene loessial clay serves as the parent material in this region. Quaternary geology, section lithology, palynology, and AMS 14C dating results indicate that a significant portion of black soil in the Xingkai Lake Plain was primarily formed during the Great Warm Period following the middle Holocene. These insights not only enhance our understanding of Holocene climate dynamics in Northeast China but also provide a substantial scientific foundation for further studies on related topics. Full article
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21 pages, 8441 KB  
Article
Upper Pleistocene Marine Levels of the Es Copinar–Es Estufadors (Formentera, Balearic Islands, West Mediterranean)
by Laura del Valle, Guillem X. Pons and Joan J. Fornós
Quaternary 2025, 8(3), 38; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8030038 - 21 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2964
Abstract
Late Pleistocene coastal deposits on the southeastern coast of Formentera (Es Ram–Es Estufadors) provide a high-resolution record of sea-level and climatic fluctuations associated with Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5. Three distinct beach levels (Sef-1, Sef-2, Sef-3) were identified, corresponding to substages MIS 5e, [...] Read more.
Late Pleistocene coastal deposits on the southeastern coast of Formentera (Es Ram–Es Estufadors) provide a high-resolution record of sea-level and climatic fluctuations associated with Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5. Three distinct beach levels (Sef-1, Sef-2, Sef-3) were identified, corresponding to substages MIS 5e, 5c, and possibly 5a, based on sedimentological features, fossil assemblages, and Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating. The oldest beach level (Sef-1) is attributed to MIS 5e (ca. 128–116 ka) and is characterised by the widespread presence of thermophilic Senegalese fauna—including Thetystrombus latus, Conus ermineus, and Linatella caudata—which mark the onset of this interglacial phase and are associated with two peaks in relative sea-level highstand. A subsequent cooling event during MIS 5d is recorded by the development of thin palaeosols and the disappearance of these warm-water taxa. The second beach level (Sef-2) reflects renewed sea-level rise and warmer conditions during MIS 5c, with abundant macrofauna and red algae. The transition to MIS 5b (~97 ka) is marked by a significant sea-level drop (down to –60 m), cooler climate, and enhanced colluvial sedimentation linked to increased runoff and erosion. In total, 54 macrofaunal species were identified—16 from Sef-1 and 46 from Sef-2—highlighting ecological shifts across substages. These results improve our understanding of coastal response to sea-level oscillations and paleoenvironmental dynamics in the western Mediterranean during the Late Pleistocene. Full article
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14 pages, 1726 KB  
Article
An Ammonite Preserved in the Upper Pliocene Lower Tejo River Deposits of Quinta Do Conde (Southwest Portugal)
by Carlos Neto de Carvalho, Miguel Barroso and Sofia Soares
Foss. Stud. 2025, 3(2), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/fossils3020008 - 3 Jun 2025
Viewed by 3659
Abstract
A cast is an object that results from a fossilization process that is considerably rare in nature. For a cast to be produced, secondary diagenetic processes during and after fossilization are normally involved. Natural casts are formed when minerals are deposited within the [...] Read more.
A cast is an object that results from a fossilization process that is considerably rare in nature. For a cast to be produced, secondary diagenetic processes during and after fossilization are normally involved. Natural casts are formed when minerals are deposited within the fossil mold. Here we describe an exceptional example of the natural cast by gypsum of an ammonite presumably preserved as a limestone-made “half” mold that had previously been transported as an extraclast, deposited and dissolved within Upper Pliocene quartz sandstones of the ancestral Tejo river. Portable X-ray fluorescence was used to analyze and compare the geochemical composition of the ammonite fossil with that of the nodules found within the same bed, reflecting different diagenetic timings. The composition of the ammonite cast reflects the in situ dissolution of limestone and the precipitation of calcium sulfate. High δ34S‰ and Sr values obtained from the ammonite show that the cast was produced by percolating acidic waters in the vadose zone, under marine influence, during the Late Pliocene or already in the Pleistocene. The waters being rich in sulfur resulted more likely from a marine water-influenced water table. Alternatively, it may have resulted from the weathering concentration of sulfur from the Marco Furado ferricretes overlying Santa Marta sandstone. This is, so far, the only testimony of the enormous temporal discontinuity that occurred during the taphonomic history of an ammonite, with a final preservation in the form of a cast made of gypsum, the most didactic example of this type of fossilization ever found in Portugal. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Continuities and Discontinuities of the Fossil Record)
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30 pages, 19867 KB  
Article
Geomorphological Analysis and Heritage Value of Dobreștilor–Brusturet Cave: A Significant Geomorphosite in the Bran–Dragoslavele Corridor, Romania
by Septimius Trif, Ștefan Bilașco, Roșca Sanda, Fodorean Ioan, Iuliu Vescan, András-István Barta and Raboșapca Irina
Heritage 2025, 8(5), 183; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8050183 - 21 May 2025
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Abstract
This study examines the morphology and development of Dobreștilor–Brusturet Cave, located in the Brusturet gorge at the western edge of the Bran–Dragoslavele Corridor, an important tourist route in the Romanian Carpathians. The research aims to analyze the geomorphological characteristics and establish the heritage [...] Read more.
This study examines the morphology and development of Dobreștilor–Brusturet Cave, located in the Brusturet gorge at the western edge of the Bran–Dragoslavele Corridor, an important tourist route in the Romanian Carpathians. The research aims to analyze the geomorphological characteristics and establish the heritage value of the Dobreştilor Cave geomorphosite, supporting protection efforts for invertebrate species that led to the cave’s designation as a natural monument. The inventory of physical features prompted the Piatra Craiului National Park Scientific Council to consider including this speleological site in a thematic geotourism circuit called “The Road of Gorges and Caves in the Upper Basin of the Dâmbovițean”, integrated within protected areas. This represents the first geomorphological study of the cave. Given its ecological significance within the national park’s strict protection zone, recreational tourism is prohibited. The cave should only be used as a geotourism resource for scientific research and education. Morphogenetic analysis reveals that the cave has evolved in a vadose hydrological regime since the Pleistocene, with cavity expansion influenced by free-flowing water alternating with that under pressure during torrential episodes, concomitant with the precipitation of calcium carbonate that formed various speleothems. This research supports documentation for promotional materials and could assist local authorities in the Dâmbovicioara commune with geotourism development decisions, potentially integrating the site into a proposed “Moieciu–Fundata–Dâmbovicioara–Rucăr Geological and Geomorphological Complex”. Full article
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