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Current climatic conditions and the occurrence of discontinuous and sporadic permafrost in the Alps result in a low turnover rate and therefore accumulation of organic matter (OM) in soils. Alpine soils are thus highly sensitive to global warming that potentially promotes the mineralisation of soil organic matter (SOM). This process might increase the release of CO 2 to the atmosphere. Our...
Soil organic matter (SOM) can directly be affected by wildfires, both in terms of quantity and quality. The combustion is often incomplete, leading to the formation of pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM), a highly heterogeneous material with prevailing aromatic nature. Focusing our attention on PyOM, we investigated an altitudinal soil sequence on Mount Etna, Italy, ranging from 500m to 1800m asl, where...
Charcoal fragments in soils are useful to reconstruct past vegetation because the level of preservation is often good enough to determine the tree genus. All forest ecosystems have the potential to burn as a result of naturally occurring or human-induced fires. Forest fires are coupled to climate and are a not-negligible factor of pedogenesis in Mediterranean areas, where they occur frequently. Furthermore,...
Towards the end of the last glacial cycle, repeated re-advances of valley glaciers in the European Alps combined with periglacial processes led to the formation of a variety of climate-related landforms. Independent age measurements of moraines and rock glacier lobes using both in-situ produced and meteoric 10 Be allows for the use of soil formation as an age proxy. In this complementary study...
Global warming leads to the melting of ice caps and glaciers and, consequently, the exposure of new areas of land to the atmosphere and weathering. These areas usually have a high reactivity to both biotic and abiotic changes. Proglacial areas in the Alps usually have a deglaciation time span of around 150years (time since the end of the “Little Ice Age” in the 1850's). We investigated a chronosequence...
A comparison was made between two soil climosequences on north- and south-facing slopes in northern Italy to determine the influence of slope aspect on soil processes. The climosequences span an elevational gradient ranging from moderate (1200 m a.s.l.) to high alpine (2420 m a.s.l.) climate zones on surfaces having an age of about 15000 years. The soils were investigated with respect to organic C,...
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