Project Details
Quantifying the linkage between meteorological data and geophysical soil properties: understanding past and present climate proxy power
Applicant
Dr. Christian Zeeden
Subject Area
Physical Geography
Geophysics
Geophysics
Term
since 2020
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 446183251
This project aims to investigate the relationship between precipitation, temperature, and topsoil properties, particularly focusing on rock magnetic proxy data, across a broad climate gradient in the Danube catchment area. The research aims to decode spatial and temporal variability using multiple proxies and apply this knowledge to assess past interglacial climates. Three main hypotheses guide the research: Hypothesis 1: The project aims to establish a clear relationship between soil properties and climate proxies over a wider climate gradient than studied in a previous project. The research involves testing various rock magnetic climate proxies by analyzing soils developed on loess deposits along the Danube. Multivariate geophysical and geochemical analyses will be used, and statistical tools such as Principal Component Analysis and regression models will help identify systematic data structures. Hypothesis 2: The study acknowledges potential differences in the composition of loess substrates due to varying provenance and sediment processes. The goal is to account for these differences using information about the background loess and integrating geochemical provenance indices into a multivariate approach. This approach will help determine the effect of substrate variability on the relationship between soil properties and climate proxies. Hypothesis 3: Rock magnetic climate transfer functions work even in inhomogeneous substrate. Transfer functions developed for recent topsoils will be extrapolated into the past to reconstruct past climate parameters, such as precipitation and temperature, from interglacial soils and loess deposits. The research will involve extensive sampling of approximately 100 loess sites along the Danube, encompassing a wide range of climate and substrate variations. Geophysical and geochemical analyses, including rock magnetism, colorimetry, and XRF geochemistry, will be performed on the samples to generate a comprehensive dataset. The data will be statistically analyzed and related to climate data, ultimately contributing to a better understanding of the relationship between soil properties and climate.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
Serbia
Cooperation Partners
Professor Dr. Slobodan Markovic; Milica Radakovic