Abstract. Borisoglebsk Upland is considered an example of a
secondary upland plain in the marginal zone of the last Middle Pleistocene
glaciation. Moraine hills and kames were reworked by glaciofluvial processes
and incised by small fluvial forms later. Its postglacial surface drift
cover is regularly defined as an undivided complex of mantle loams of
dominantly subaerial origin with characteristic cryogenic features and
remnants of paleosols. However, some previous studies suggest that lake
sedimentation played an important role in the postglacial history of the
Borisoglebsk Upland. This paper presents results of a detailed investigation
of postglacial sedimentary cover of the eastern part of the Borisoglebsk
Upland aimed to reconstruct the co-evolution of surface deposits, soil cover
and geomorphic landscapes since degradation of the last Middle Pleistocene
glaciation about 150 ka (MIS-6). The study is essentially based on a
comprehensive lithological, pedological and geocryological description of
postglacial deposits in cores (hand or machine-driven) and open sections,
systematic sampling for grain size analysis and selective sampling for
14C absolute dating and monoliths structural examination. The results
indicate that most of the surface drifts in this feature consists of
stratified lacustrine deposits. Their Late Pleistocene age is
stratigraphically confined by the underlying paleosols and incorporated
peats of the Mikulino interglacial age (MIS-5) and several organic-rich
layers within the lake sequence 14C dated to the Middle Valdai
interstadial (MIS-3). Overlying mantle loams and colluvial deposits with
cryogenic features and low organic matter content those facially substitute
lacustrine sediments were attributed to the Late Valdai stadial (MIS-2).
After the Mid-Holocene stabilization, relatively thin colluvial cover
identified by the increased amount of organic matter also deposited. We
conclude that lacustrine sedimentation is the primary Late Pleistocene agent
that transformed the initial glacial topography and most characteristic type
of lithodynamics of the eastern Borisoglebsk Upland.
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