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Lake Mladotice in the Western Czech Republic - Sediments as a Geoarchive for Flood Events and Pre- to Postcommunist Change in Land Use since 1872

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2012

Abstract

The Mladotice Lake is lake of unique genetic type in Czechia. In May 1872 a landslide as a result an extreme rainfall event occurred in the western Czechia, blocking the Mladotický stream valley and creating the Mladotice Lake.

The 1952 and 1975 air images document that collective farming had a great impact on the lake basin evolution when balks and field terraces were removed and fields were made much larger. Because of this change in land use we expected higher soil erosion and a related increase in the sedimentation rate.

First bathymetric measurements of the newly created lake were carried out in 1972 and were repeated in 1999 and in 2003. Our analysis of the sedimentary record aims to identify the sediment stratigraphy, its basic physical and chemical properties, isotope content and thin sections yield a detailed temporal resolution of the sedimentation chronology.

In some areas a sediment thickness of four meters was detected. Hence, the average sedimentation rate is from 2.2 to 2.7 cm per year.