10:45 AM - 11:00 AM
[HQR03-07] Regional environmental reconstruction after the Bronze Age using drilled paleo-swamp sediment samples near the Kaman-Kalehöyük, central Anatolia: A feasibility study
Keywords:Kaman-Kalehöyük, paleo-environmental reconstruction
The sediments were collected from a wetland in the north of the Kaman-Kalehöyük. Because it is prohibited to take samples outside Turkey, water content, XRF core scanner, and XRD analysis were conducted in Turkey as a feasibility study. We will introduce the summary of the core drilling and the results of observation and analysis in this presentation (interpretation of the analysis results, Satake et al., this session)
The coring site was selected with the thickest paleo-swamp mud deposits reported by Kashima (2008), and a corer modified from a portable percussion piston corer (Suganuma et al., 2019) was used. The sediments were recovered at depths of approximately 87~168 cm (KL2202-1 core) and 230~288 cm (KL2202-2 core) deep from the ground surface. The lithology of KL2202-1 core was gray to black-gray silty sand to sand, and the lithology of KL2202-02 core was black-gray sand with gravel at the top, changing to brownish-white sandy mud and gray clayey soft mud. The moisture content of the KL2202-02 core is higher in the clayey soft mud layer (about 20~30%) than in the sand layer (>15%). The brownish-white sandy mud and gray clayey soft mud are very different in both lithology and physical properties, and since black-gray sand with gravel is intercalated between the two, the gray clayey soft mud is considered to correspond to the gray sandy clay layer reported by Kashima (2008). Based on the age model of Kashima (2008), the upper part of the gray clayey soft mud of KL2202-02 core was inferred to correspond to the Iron Age, about 2,800 years ago. To estimate the provenances of the sediments, elemental analysis using XRF core scanner (ITRAX) of slab samples collected from the KL2202-02 core and WD-XRF and XRD analysis of samples from the KL2202-1 and KL2202-2 cores were conducted at the Institute of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA) in Turkey (in detail, Satake et al., this session). The clayey soft mud layer contains charcoals and plant fragments, and radiocarbon dating is expected to provide a high-resolution age model.