News Release

New European loess map

Distribution of fertile soil updated for the first time in decades

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Helmholtz Association

European Loess Map from 2007

image: European Loess Map from 2007 view more 

Credit: Source: Dagmar Haase/UFZ

Leipzig. A new map showing the distribution of loess sediments in Europe has been published for the first time in 75 years, in digital format. With this map, Dagmar Haase, a geographer at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), has completed the work of various researchers who had begun as far back as the 1970s and 80s to revise the last comprehensive inventory produced by Rudolf Grahmann, which appeared in Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde in Leipzig in 1932. Haase and her colleagues have produced the new map with a scale of 1:2,500,000 with the help of modern digital information systems.

Whether they are lime-grey or dark black, loess sediments and the soils derived from them are of special importance for agriculture worldwide because they are some of the most fertile soils there are. In Germany, soil quality is given a rating using an index. The maximum value of 100 was attributed to the loess soil at Eickendorf in the Magdeburger Börde plains.

Loess sediments and their soils cover around one-tenth of the earth. In Europe, loess is a powdery product of glaciations during the Ice Age. During those cold periods, this very fine, light material was swept from bare regions on the edges of the glaciers and deposited in regions with denser vegetation. Loess consists largely of quartz grains and lime. The very fine grains ensure good aeration, water storage and mineral levels. This means that soils derived from loess are very fertile, like the black earth of the Börde plains, but are also particularly susceptible to erosion. It is therefore important to know where exactly these fertile soils so worthy of protection are to be found.

As far back as 1966 the then Loess Commission of the International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA) decided to draw up a European loess map. Although this resulted in intensive research and new findings in various European countries, a new map for the whole of Europe was never produced and the already outdated map of 1932 remained the only standard work. In 2003, a group of Leipzig-based scientists resumed work on the European loess map, the plans for which had been developed in the 1980s. For this it was necessary to find standardised definitions for the various types of loess sediments. The idea for the European loess map was born back in 1966. Over the following two decades the analogue dispersal data for loess and loess sediments throughout Europe were collated through collaboration between scientists in Eastern and Western Europe. After the fall of Communism in 1990, the project was put on hold for a few years because of the ‘restructuring’ in Central Eastern Europe. The rich fund of map material from all over Europe and the former Soviet Union that had been collected by about 2000 was then used at the UFZ to produce the European Loess Map 1:2,500,000 using modern GIS technology.

The new European Loess Map is a modern digital information system that links coordinates and factual information. It can be used all over the world and is already in high demand from all parts of the world. "We hope that with this fundamental work we have provided a basis for future landscape models that could help us to take timely action to combat the global problem of soil erosion," says Dagmar Haase. "Our data are also important for the reconstruction of climate history in Europe." In total, loess soils cover around one fifth of Europe: especially in the Eastern European lowlands, in a belt north of the low mountain range, in the foothills of the Alps and the Danube basin and in various other river basins. The publication of the map in Quaternary Science Reviews marks the completion of a project on which geographers and soil scientists have been working for decades.

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publication:
Haase, D., Fink, J., Haase, G., Ruske, R., Pecsi, M., Richter, H., Altermann, M., Jäger, K. D. (2007): Loess in Europe - its spatial distribution based on a European Loess Map, scale 1:2,500,000
Quat.Sci.Rev. 26 (9-10), 1301-1312
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2007.02.003

links:
International Union for Quaternary Research (INQUA):
http://www.inqua.tcd.ie/
http://www.loessletter.com/

more information:
Tilo Arnhold / Doris Böhme, Press office
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ
phone +49-341-235-1269
email: presse@ufz.de

The Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ was established in 1991 and has about 830 employees in Leipzig, Halle/S. and Magdeburg. They study the complex interactions between humans and the environment in cultivated and damaged landscapes. The scientists develop concepts and processes to help secure the natural foundations of human life for future generations.

The Helmholtz Association contributes to solving major challenges facing society, science and the economy with top scientific achievements in six research areas: Energy, Earth and Environment, Health, Key Technologies, Structure of Matter, Transport and Space. With 25,700 employees in 15 research centres and an annual budget of approximately 2.3 billion euro, the Helmholtz Association is Germany's largest scientific organisation. Its work follows in the tradition of the great natural scientist Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894).


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