Abstrakt
Although much has been written about a cosmic impact event in the Western Alps of the Mt. Viso area, the event closely
tied with the Younger Dryas Boundary (YDB) of 12.8 ka and onset of the Younger Dryas (YD), the affected land surface is
considered to contain a similar black mat suite of sediment found on three continents. While work elsewhere has focused
on recovered sediment from lake and ice cores, buried lacustrine/alluvial records, and surface glacial and paraglacial
records, no one has traced a mountain morphosequence of deposits with the objective of investigating initial weathering/
soil morphogenesis that occurred in ice recessional deposits up to the YDB when the surface was subjected to intense
heat, presumably, as hypothesized by Mahaney et al. (2016a) from a cosmic airburst. With the land surface rapidly free
of ice following glacial retreat during the Břlling-Allerřd interstadial, weathering processes ~13.5 to 12.8 ka led to
weathering and soil morphogenesis in a slow progression as the land surface became free of ice. To determine the exposed
land character in the mid- to late-Allerřd, it is possible to utilize an inverted stratigraphic soil morphogenesis working
backward in time, from known post-Little Ice Age (LIA) (i.e. time-zero) through LIA (~0.45 to ~0.10 ka), to at least the
middle Neoglacial (~2 ka), to answer several questions. What were the likely soil profile states in existence at the end of
the Allerřd just prior to the cosmic impact/airburst (YDB)? Assuming these immature weathered regolith sections of the
Late Allerřd approximated the <1 ka old profiles seen today, and assuming the land surface was subjected to a hypothesized
instant temperature burst from ambient to ~2200oC at ~12.8 ka, what would be the expected effect on the resident
sediment? To test the mid-LG (YDB) to YD relationship we analyzed the paleosols in both suites of deposits – mid-LG to
YD – to test that the airburst grains are restricted to Late Allerřd paleosols and using relative-age-determination criteria,
that the overlapping YD to mid-LG moraines are closely related in time. These are some of the questions about the black
mat that we seek to answer with reference to sites in the upper Guil and Po rivers of the Mt. Viso area.
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