Loess is aperiglacial oraeolian (windborne) sediment, defined as an accumulation of 20% or less ofclay with a balance of roughly equal partssand and silt (with a typicalgrain size from 20 to 50 micrometers),[3][4] often loosely cemented bycalcium carbonate. Usually, they arehomogeneous and highlyporous and have vertical capillaries that permit the sediment to fracture and form verticalbluffs.
Loess deposits may become very thick: at more than a hundred meters in areas of Northwestern China and tens of meters in parts of theMidwestern United States. Loesses generally occur as blanket deposits that cover hundreds of square kilometers. The deposits are often tens of meters thick. Loesses often have steep or vertical faces.[6] Because the grains are angular, loesses will often stand in banks for many years withoutslumping. This type of soil has "vertical cleavage", and thus, it can be easily excavated to form cave dwellings, which is a popular method of makinghuman habitations in some parts of China. However, loesses can readily erode.
In several areas of the world, loessridges have formed that had been aligned with theprevailing winds during the lastglacial maximum; these are called "paha ridges" in America and "greda ridges" in Europe. The formation of these loessdunes has been explained as a combination of wind andtundra conditions.
The wordloess, with connotations of origin by wind-deposited accumulation, was introduced into English from theGermanLöss (1824),[7] which can be traced back toSwiss German and iscognate with the English wordloose and the German wordlos.[8] It was first applied to theRhine River valley loesses around 1821.[9][10]
The term "Löß" was first described inCentral Europe byKarl Cäsar von Leonhard (1823–1824),[11] who had reported yellowish brown, silty deposits along the Rhine valley nearHeidelberg.[1]Charles Lyell (1834) brought the term into widespread usage, observing similarities between "loess" and its derivatives along the loess bluffs in the Rhine and inMississippi.[1] At the time, it was thought that the yellowish brown silt-rich sediment was offluvial origin and had been deposited by large rivers.[1] Theaeolian origin of the loesses was recognized later (Virlet D'Aoust 1857),[12] particularly due to the convincing observations of loesses inChina byFerdinand von Richthofen (1878).[1][13] A tremendous number of papers have been published since then, focusing on the formation of loesses and on loess/paleosol (older soil buried under deposits) sequences as the archives of climate and environment change.[1] Research on loesses in China to supportwater conservation has been ongoing since 1954.[citation needed]
Much effort was put into setting up regional and local loessstratigraphies and their correlations (Kukla 1970, 1975, 1977).[14][15][16] However, even the chronostratigraphical position of the last interglacial soil correlating with marineisotope substage 5e was a matter of debate, due to the lack of robust and reliable numerical dating, as summarized, for example, by Zöller et al. (1994)[17] and Frechen et al. (1997)[18] for the Austrian and Hungarian loess stratigraphy, respectively.[1]
Since the 1980s,thermoluminescence (TL),optically stimulated luminescence (OSL), and infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating have been available, providing the possibility for dating the time of loess (dust) depositions, i.e., the time elapsed since the last exposure of the mineral grains to daylight.[1] During the past decade,luminescence dating has significantly improved by new methodological improvements, especially the development of singlealiquot regenerative (SAR) protocols (Murray & Wintle 2000)[19] resulting in reliable ages (or age estimates) with an accuracy of up to 5 and 10% for thelast glacial record.[1] More recently, luminescence dating has also become a robust dating technique for penultimate and antepenultimate glacial loess (e.g. Thiel et al. 2011,[20] Schmidt et al. 2011)[21] allowing for a reliable correlation of loess/palaeosol sequences for at least the last two interglacial/glacial cycles throughout Europe and the Northern Hemisphere (Frechen 2011).[1][22] Furthermore, the numerical dating provides the basis for quantitative loess research applying more sophisticated methods to determine and understand high-resolution proxy data including the palaeodust content of the atmosphere, variations of the atmospheric circulation patterns and wind systems, palaeoprecipitation, and palaeotemperature.[1]
Besides luminescence dating methods, the use of radiocarbon dating in loess has increased during the past decades. Advances in methods of analyses, instrumentation, and refinements to the radiocarbon calibration curve have made it possible to obtain reliable ages from loess deposits for the last 40–45 ka. However, the use of this method relies on finding suitable in situ organic material in deposits such as charcoal, seeds, earthworm granules, or snail shells.[23][24][25]
Medicinal clay produced byLuvos. The clay is composed of loess with a fineness grade of 1.
According to Pye (1995),[26] four fundamental requirements are necessary for the formation of loess: a dust source, adequate wind energy to transport the dust, a suitable accumulation area, and a sufficient amount of time.[1]
Periglacial (glacial) loess is derived from the floodplains ofglacialbraided rivers that carried large volumes of glacial meltwater and sediments from the annual melting of continental ice sheets and mountain ice caps during the spring and summer. During the autumn and winter, when the melting of the ice sheets and ice caps ceased, the flow of meltwater down these rivers either ceased or was greatly reduced. As a consequence, large parts of the formerly submerged and unvegetated floodplains of these braided rivers dried out and were exposed to the wind. Because the floodplains consist of sediment containing a high content of glacially ground flour-likesilt andclay, they were highly susceptible to winnowing of their silts andclays by the wind. Once entrained by the wind, particles were then deposited downwind. The loess deposits found along both sides of theMississippi River alluvial valley are a classic example of periglacial loess.[27][28]
During theQuaternary, loess and loess-like sediments were formed in periglacial environments on mid-continentalshield areas in Europe and Siberia as well as on the margins of high mountain ranges like inTajikistan and on semi-arid margins of some lowland deserts as in China.[1]
In England, periglacial loess is also known asbrickearth.
The thick Chinese loess deposits are non-glacial loess having been blown in from deserts in northern China.[31] The loess covering theGreat Plains ofNebraska,Kansas, andColorado is considered to be non-glacial desert loess.[27] Non-glacial desert loess is also found in Australia[32] and Africa.[28]
Loess tends to develop into very rich soils. Under appropriate climatic conditions, it is some of the most agriculturally productive terrain in the world.[33]
Soils underlain by loess tend to be excessively drained. The fine grainsweather rapidly due to their large surface area, making soils derived from loess rich. The fertility of loess soils is due largely to a highcation exchange capacity (the ability of the soil to retain nutrients) andporosity (the air-filled space in the soil). The fertility of loess is not due to organic matter content, which tends to be rather low, unlike tropical soils which derive their fertility almost wholly from organic matter.
Even well managed loessfarmland can experience dramaticerosion of well over 2.5 kg/m2 per year. In China, theloess deposits which give theYellow River its color have been farmed and have produced phenomenal yields for over one thousand years. Winds pick up loess particles contributing to theAsian Dust pollution problem. The largest deposit of loess in theUnited States which is theLoess Hills along the border ofIowa andNebraska, has survivedintensive farming andpoor farming practices. For almost 150 years, this loess deposit was farmed withmouldboard ploughs and tilled in the fall, both intensely erosive practices. At times it suffered erosion rates of over 10 kilograms per square meter per year. Today this loess deposit is worked as low till orno till in all areas and is aggressivelyterraced.[citation needed]
Loess deposits of varying thickness (decimeter to several tens of meters) are widely distributed over the European continent.[23] The northern European loess belt stretches from southern England and northern France to Germany, Poland and the southern Ukraine and deposits are characterized by strong influences ofperiglacial conditions.[37]South-eastern European loess is mainly deposited in plateau-like situations in theDanube basins, likely derived from the Danube River system.[38][39][40] Insouth-western Europe, relocated loess derivatives are mostly restricted to theEbro Valley and central Spain.[41][42]
TheLoess Hills ofIowa owe their fertility to theprairietopsoils built by 10,000 years of post-glacial accumulation of organic-richhumus as a consequence of a persistentgrasslandbiome. When the valuableA-horizon topsoil is eroded or degraded, the underlying loess soil is infertile and requires the addition offertilizer to supportagriculture.
The loess along theMississippi River nearVicksburg, Mississippi, consists of three layers. ThePeoria Loess,Sicily Island Loess, andCrowley's Ridge Loess accumulated at different periods during thePleistocene. Ancient soils, calledpaleosols, have developed on the top of theSicily Island Loess andCrowley's Ridge Loess. The lowermost loess, the Crowley's Ridge Loess, accumulated during the lateIllinoian Stage. The middle loess, Sicily Island Loess, accumulated during the earlyWisconsin Stage. The uppermost loess, the Peoria Loess, in which the modern soil has developed, accumulated during the late Wisconsin Stage. Animal remains include terrestrialgastropods andmastodons.[44]
Much ofArgentina is covered by loess. Two areas of loess are usually distinguished in Argentina: the neotropical loess north oflatitude 30° S and the pampean loess.[49]
The neotropical loess is made of silt or silty clay. Relative to the pampean loess the neotropical loess is poor inquartz andcalcium carbonate. The source region for this loess is thought by some scientists to be areas offluvio-glacial deposits theAndean foothills formed by thePatagonian Ice Sheet. Other researchers stress the importance ofvolcanic material in the neotropical loess.[49]
The pampean loess is sandy or made of silty sand.[49]
^Leonhard K. C. von (1823–1824).Charakteristik der Felsarten. 3 Vols., J. Engelmann Verlag Heidelberg, pp. 772.
^Virlet D'Aoust P.T. (1857). "Observations sur un terrain d`origine météorique ou de transport aerien qui existe au Mexique et sur le phénomène des trombes de poussière auquel il doit principalement son origine".Geol. Soc. France, Full., 2d, Ser. 2, 129–139.
^Richthofen F. von (1878). "Bemerkungen zur Lößbildung".Verh Geol Reichsanst, Berlin, pp 1–13.
^Kukla G. J. (1975). "Loess stratigraphy of Central Europe". In: Butzer K. W. & Isaac G. L. (eds.) After the Australopithecus, pp. 99–188. Mouton, The Hague.
^Ding, Z.L. (2002). "The loess record in southern Tajikistan and correlation with Chinese loess".Earth and Planetary Science Letters.200 (3–4). Elsevier:387–400.Bibcode:2002E&PSL.200..387D.doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(02)00637-4., Fig. 1 (b) showing the distribution of loess, deserts, and mountains in Central Asia (adopted from [T.S. Liu, Loess and the Environment, China Ocean Press, Beijing, 1985.]). The locality of the Chashmanigar loess section is indicated by the solid arrow.
^Újvári, Gábor; Varga, Andrea; Ramos, Frank C.; Kovács, János; Németh, Tibor; Stevens, Thomas (April 2012). "Evaluating the use of clay mineralogy, Sr–Nd isotopes and zircon U–Pb ages in tracking dust provenance: An example from loess of the Carpathian Basin".Chemical Geology.304–305:83–96.Bibcode:2012ChGeo.304...83U.doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2012.02.007.ISSN0009-2541.
^Bertran, Pascal; Liard, Morgane; Sitzia, Luca; Tissoux, Hélène (November 2016). "A map of Pleistocene aeolian deposits in Western Europe, with special emphasis on France".Journal of Quaternary Science.31 (8) e2909.Bibcode:2016JQS....31E2909B.doi:10.1002/jqs.2909.ISSN0267-8179.S2CID132258680.
^Smalley, I.J., Davin, J.E. 1980. The First Hundred Years-A Historical Bibliography of New Zealand Loess. New Zealand Soil Bureau Bibliographic Report 28, 166pp.
^*Hardcastle, J. 1890. On the Timaru loess as a climate register. Transactions & Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute 23, 324-332 (on line: Royal Society of New Zealandhttp://rsnz.natlib.govt.nz; reproduced in Loess Letter supplement 23, November 1988).