Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1044682 | Quaternary International | 2007 | 6 Pages |
Paleosols are soils that preserve a large amount of information about the environments of the past. Many paleosols are of such scientific interest, scenic attraction, rarity, ecological importance, or didactic value, that they can be considered a cultural heritage. In flat or gently sloping areas of densely populated territories, the preservation of this cultural heritage can be threatened by urbanization. Land-use planning to preserve the cultural heritage of the landscape should therefore take into account the presence of paleosols. The aim of this work is to set up a methodology which could be applied on existing soil databases to implement soil information related to paleosols in land planning. The study area was the Po River plain and morainal hills of the Lombardy region of Italy. The area is made up of Pleistocene glaciofluvial deposits and Holocene alluvial sediments. Existing knowledge about Lombardy relict and buried paleosols of different Pleistocene ages, produced by authors during the last decades, was collected and used to select paleosol properties and rate their cultural value. A GIS of soils, paleosols, pedolandscapes, parks, and land uses has been created and investigated to identify pedolandscapes rich in paleosols with high cultural value. Many areas with paleosols resulted threatened by complete loss because of urbanization. A land planning strategy aimed at preserving the cultural heritage of the territory should foresee the enlargement of the part of the territory currently set aside as a park, to protect those pedolandscapes which are at highest risk, that is where urbanization exceeds 35% of the area.