Abstract
A recent bathymetric survey of Lake Constance revealed ~ 170 mounds composed of loosely deposited rocks aligned in a ~ 10-km long chain along the southern Swiss shoreline in a water depth of 3–5 m. The mounds are 10–30 m in diameter and up to 1.5 m high. Over their entire length of occurrence, the mounds are estimated to be composed of ~ 60 million individual boulders, with a total weight of ~ 78,000 t. A ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey showed that the mounds are not linked to the glacial substrate but were rather deposited artificially on the edge of a prograding shelf composed of Holocene lake sediments. Here, we present the results of a coring campaign with four piston cores along a GPR transect across one of the mounds. The cores recovered the full Holocene sedimentary succession all the way into the basal till that is overlain by lacustrine sediments dating back to ~ 14,400 cal. yrs BP. The four cores are merged into a ~ 12.4-m long composite section reflecting continuous sedimentation from the siliciclastic-dominated Late Glacial to the carbonate-rich Late Holocene. The stratigraphic horizon representing the mound’s construction was radiocarbon-dated to ~ 5600–5300 cal. yrs BP, placing them in the Neolithic period. This age was confirmed by radiocarbon dating of wood samples collected during underwater excavation of the mounds. Geochemical analysis of the Holocene sedimentary succession shows generally high carbonate contents (average of 69%). The interval from 5750 to 4950 cal. yrs BP, a part of the mound period, is characterized by a Holocene minimum in carbonate content (average of 57%) and by larger mean grain sizes. Comparing these values to those from a recent surface-sediment depth transect indicates that this was a period of rather low lake levels, which might have favoured mound construction. Correlations to nearby archaeological sites and to the general West-Central European lake-level record indicates that the mounds likely were built during a short phase of low lake levels during a general trend of climatic cooling followed by a lake-level transgression.
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Introduction
From 2013 to 2015, the International Commission for the Protection of Lake Constance (IGKB) supported a bathymetric survey of Lake Constance. A combination of multibeam echo sounding (MBES) and airborne laser scanning (LiDAR) resulted in a new high-resolution bathymetric map covering the whole lake with a grid resolution of 0.5 m (not public), as well as 3 m and 10 m, which are available to the public. Within the first analyses of the results, a chain of submerged mounds along the shallow-water zone of the southern shore in Switzerland was discovered (Wessels et al. 2016). This initial, unexpected discovery laid the base for a systematic exploration by the Archaeological Department of the Canton of Thurgau (AATG): the mounds are arranged parallel to the shoreline in a water depth of 3–5 m with a regular spacing of 85–110 m. The whole chain of mounds stretches from the village of Altnau to the town of Romanshorn, covering ~ 10 km (Fig. 1). The mounds are circular in shape with diameters of 10–30 m and a height of up to 1.5 m. They are built up by loosely deposited, cobble-sized rocks, which reflect the composition of local outcrops of till sediments in creeks and along the beach, consisting mainly of Molasse sandstones with minor amounts of gneisses, limestones and other crystalline rocks (Leuzinger et al. 2021). The total chain is estimated to be composed of more than 60 Mio individual cobbles, weighting ~ 78,000 t. Already upon their initial discovery, the question of a natural or anthropogenic origin of the mounds was raised (Leuzinger et al. 2021). Further geophysical, sedimentological, and archaeological investigations focused on Mound no. 5, located ~ 250 m offshore the village of Uttwil (Fig. 2a). An underwater ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey showed a succession of glacial till, late glacial clays and postglacial lake sediments underlying the mounds, indicating their non-glacial and thus most likely anthropogenic origin. The survey further revealed that the mounds were initially constructed at the shelf edge and that the shelf has prograded towards the lake since then (Hornung 2018). Archaeological dives and a sampling trench in a mound retrieved multiple fragments of wood. Most of them were radiocarbon dated to 5550–5250 cal. yrs BP, suggesting that the mounds were built during the Neolithic age by local pile dwellers (Leuzinger et al. 2021). However, it is still unclear if these mounds were constructed on periodically dry land or if they have been submerged in the lake since their construction. Calculations based on geotechnical drillings in the vicinity of the Lake Constance outlet resulted in a minimum lake level of 393 m above sea level (m a.s.l.; Swiss vertical datum), still 0.5–2.0 m above the top of the mounds (Leuzinger et al. 2021). This study presents in detail the results of a sediment-core transect carried out in 2019 across the shelf along a ground-penetrating radar line crossing a mound. The focus of this sedimentological, petrophysical and geochemical analysis is to identify changes and trends of the depositional environment reflecting the paleoenvironment before, during and after mound formation. The main aim is to reconstruct lake-level changes that may have strongly influenced relevant processes. For this purpose, the core-based paleoenvironmental reconstruction will be calibrated with modern surface samples taken at various water depths. Further, we aim to confirm the Neolithic age of the mounds by dating the sediments corresponding to the prehistoric shelf edge the mounds were constructed on.
Site description
Limnology
With a total surface area of 536 km2, a maximum depth of 251 m and a volume of 48.4 km3, tri-national (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) Lake Constance is one of the largest perialpine lakes. Most of the inflow (~ 65%) is brought by the Alpine Rhine River. The lake is generally divided into the larger and deeper Upper Lake (“Obersee”) and the smaller and shallower Lower Lake (“Untersee”). The mean lake level in the Upper Lake is some 395 m a.s.l. Driven by seasonal snow melt in the Alpine source area, lake-level maxima are reached in June and July. Consequently, minima occur in late winter (March) when precipitation is retained as snow. The mean annual difference between minima and maxima is 1.40 m and the observed all-time maximum difference is 3.38 m (Güde and Straile 2016). After a period of anthropogenic eutrophication during the 20th century, the lake has returned to its natural monomictic, oligotrophic state (Wessels et al. 1999; Milan et al. 2022). Sediments mainly brought in by the Rhine River are usually transported along the northern shore (Wessels 1995; IGKB 2016). Small-scale slow currents in the shallow water areas close to the shore are mainly controlled by gradients in temperature and density while strong rip-currents are also driven by onshore winds (Wessels 1999).
Geological setting
The greater Lake Constance area lies in the Molasse basin in the northern Alpine foreland. Most of the catchment of the Alpine Rhine River is built up by Mesozoic limestone (Helvetic nappes) and metamorphic schists (Penninic nappes) (Wessels 1998a). With the onset of the Quaternary, the Molasse substrate around Lake Constance was covered multiple times by the advancing and retreating Rhine Glacier, which led to formation of several overdeepened valleys, with the Lake Constance Basin as the largest of them. After the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the Rhine Glacier retreated and modern Lake Constance became ice-free (Keller 1994; Wessels 1995, 1998a, b, c).
Previous studies of Lake Constance sediments
In general, Upper Lake Constance can be divided into three main sedimentation areas: the northern slope influenced by allochthonous clastic input from the Rhine River, the central basin characterized by turbidite deposits, and the southern slope, which is dominated by autochthonous carbonate production typical for a hard-water lake (Wessels 1995, 1998a). First sediment cores in Lake Constance were retrieved in the late 1960s near the Rhine Delta (Förstner et al. 1968). In the 1980s and 1990s, multiple coring campaigns retrieved piston cores to classify the different sediment types, map their distribution and track changes in the trophic state, lake level, and climate (Giovanoli 1991; Hofmann 1991; Ostendorp 1991; Neukirch 1991; Niessen and Sturm 1991; Niessen et al. 1992). The sediments investigated in all these campaigns cover the last ca. 17,500 cal. yrs BP and represent different depositional settings ranging from sub- to proximal glacial sediments, annually laminated loess deposits, and lake marls intercalated with flood layers (Wessels 1998b). They provided useful information about the natural change in environmental conditions and the anthropogenic influence (Kober et al. 2007; Hanisch et al. 2009; Schwalb et al. 2013). The recovery of the longest available core, a 24 m long core from the Central Basin (Schaller et al. 2022), marks the most recent limnogeological research of Lake Constance.
The shallow-water area
About 14% of Upper Lake Constance is part of the shallow-water area with water depths less than 10 m that mostly stretch out 200–500 m from the shore towards the lake (Güde and Straile 2016). The distribution of sediments in this ‘shelf’ area is influenced by clastic river input, autochthonous calcite precipitation and resuspension, as well as deposition by wind-induced waves (Schmieder et al. 2004; Güde and Straile 2016). Large-scale, lake-wide analyses of littoral surface sediments show a decrease in allochthonous material from east to west and north to south and decreasing mean grain sizes with increasing water depths. In general, larger mean grain sizes are observed along the northern shore (Schmieder et al. 2004; IGKB 2016). The littoral surface sediments of the southern shore are commonly described as fine- to coarse-grained without clear and distinct laminations or sedimentary structures. This is attributed to the constant redistribution and lakeward transport out of the shallow-water area (Güde et al. 2009; Güde and Straile 2016). In recent years, several studies investigated the increasing erosion of surface sediments and the resulting disintegration of archaeological artifacts of the littoral zone (Ostendorp et al. 2016; Ebersbach et al. 2019). Studies have been carried out to better understand the processes and mechanisms involved in surface-sediment distribution (Wessels and Weber 2013; Hofmann et al. 2019; Wessels and Hornung 2019).
Archaeological background
There are few traces of Paleo- and Mesolithic human activity in the region (Leuzinger 2010). The first evidence of Neolithic pile dwellings along the Lake Constance shore dates to ca. 5900 cal. yrs BP. Throughout the Neolithic, these occupations were short-term and discontinuous. Settlements were built in multiple waves of occupation and were often abandoned and re-occupied later. With the onset of the Bronze Age (~ 4200 cal. yrs BP), the settlements became more permanent, and the Lake Constance Area was relatively densely populated (Schlichtherle 2004; Billamboz 2014; Benguerel et al. 2020). The first written sources of human activity in the region date to the time of Roman occupation (~ 2000–1600 cal. yrs BP). Alamannic settlement along the Northern and Southern shores of Upper Lake Constance occurred from ~ 1750 to 1250 cal. yrs BP (Leuzinger 2013). Well-preserved sites from the Neolithic and Bronze Age are found especially along the German shores of the Lower Lake (e.g., Hornstaad Hörnle) and the Überlingen Basin of the Upper Lake (e.g., Sipplingen, Bodman, Unteruhldingen) (Kolb 1997; Köninger 1997; Dieckmann et al. 1997). On Swiss territory, three of the most intensely studied areas are those of Upper Lake (Arbon-Bleiche 2 and 3), Lower Lake (e.g., Steckborn, Ermatingen, Eschenz) and Seebachtal (Nussbaumersee, Ürschhausen-Horn), ~ 40 km to the west (Hasenfratz 1997; Jacomet et al. 2004; Brem and Leuzinger 2016). However, up to today, there is no direct evidence for settlements in the vicinity of mound no. 5 around ~ 5450 BP (Leuzinger et al. 2021). Since 2011, a total of 111 representative sites from France, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, and Slovenia are listed as UNESCO-World Heritage Site Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps. Eleven of those selected sites are found along the shores of Lake Constance (Hagmann and Schlichtherle 2011).
Materials and methods
Geophysical methods
The underwater GPR survey was performed in April 2018 offshore the settlements of Uttwil, Romanshorn and Güttingen. Multiple profiles running parallel and orthogonal to the shoreline in the vicinity of eight different mounds were recorded with a bistatic broadband antenna (Geophysical Survey Systems Inc.) at 200 MHz frequency, which was drawn directly above the sediment surface. The antenna was towed along the transect at a measurement interval of 0.7–1.0 cm in a water-tight casing on a sled developed at TU Darmstadt (Hornung 2023). The data were processed with the software ReflexW (Sandmeier Scientific Software), travel times were converted to depth by using a wave velocity of 0.05 m/ns for all profiles (Hornung 2018).
Sediment coring and surface-sediment sampling
A coring campaign was carried out in June 2019. The four coring sites are located along a GPR transect in the shallow-water area on the southern shelf (Hornung 2018, Fig. 2b). Coring was performed from an anchored inflatable coring platform in a water depth of 3.4–4.7 m. A percussion piston-coring system was used with a barrel length of 3 m and a diameter of 6 cm. For each coring location, a gravity short core and one to two piston cores were taken with an overlap of ~ 50 cm. Cores were cut into ~ 1-m long sections for better handling. In total, 11 cores were retrieved and cut into 25 sections. The sections were labelled after the coring locations and core number (e.g., BO_32_3A is the first section (A) from the 3rd core (3) of coring site BO_32). The sediment-surface samples were taken by archaeological divers from the AATG in May 2020. Twelve samples were recovered along a water-depth transect from 0.5 to 6.0 m. This transect also follows the GPR transect (Fig. 2b).
Sediment description and analysis
Core sections were analyzed for wet bulk density (WBD) and magnetic susceptibility (MS) at 5 mm resolution with a GEOTEK-multi-sensor-core-logger (MSCL). The two lowermost sections (BO19_100_3B and BO19_100_3C) were additionally analyzed with X-ray computed tomography (CT) at the Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Bern. Afterward, the cores were split in half, photographed (Geotek linescan) and macro- and microscopically described (texture, colour, sedimentological structures). For the microscopical description of the texture, smear slides were produced. Samples for geochemical laboratory analyses were taken every 20 cm, freeze-dried, and then powdered and homogenized with pestle and mortar. Total carbon (TC), nitrogen (TN) and sulphur (TS) measurements were performed on a CHNS elemental analyser (Thermo Scientific Flash 2000). Total inorganic carbon (TIC) was measured with a multi-element EA 2000CS. Total organic carbon (TOC) content was calculated by subtracting TIC from TC. The carbonate content in weight percent (wt% CaCO3) was calculated by multiplying TIC by 8.33. Organic matter content (wt% OM) was calculated by multiplying TOC by 1.8 (Meyers and Teranes 2001). Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIRS) was used to measure the biogenic silica content (wt% bSi) following the method described by Meyer-Jacob et al. (2014) using a Bruker Vertex 70 HTS-XT instrument set up and sample preparation as described in Vogel et al. (2016). Siliciclastic wt% (SilC) was calculated by subtracting CaCO3, OM and bSi wt% from 100%. Volumetric (vol%) particle-size distribution (PSD) was measured by laser- diffraction analysis (LDA). To break up naturally formed aggregates, organic matter was dissolved with 30% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The samples were then further dispersed by adding a dispersion solution consisting of a mixture of sodium hexametaphosphate (NaPO3) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) and shaking them overnight (Ryzak and Bieganowski 2011). In addition, aggregate-forming carbonates were dissolved with 5% hydrochloric acid (HCl) (Murray 2002). Measurements were carried out on a Malvern Mastersizer 2000 at the Institute of Geography of the University of Bern. Measurements for TIC, TC, TN, TS (CNS), bSi (FTIRS) and PSD-LDA as well as the calculations of CaCO3, OM, bSi and SilC were carried out on the surface samples in the same way as for the core samples.
Composite profile
Based on macroscopic sedimentological structures (e.g., distinct layers) and MSCL data, overlapping sections between piston cores were correlated to establish a composite section for each coring location. These composite profiles of all four cores were then visually correlated along prominent layers guided by the GPR stratigraphy and the radiocarbon ages resulting in a 12.4-m long dual composite section (hereafter termed composite2 section, or simply BO19). The two correlations between cores BO19_12 and BO19_32 and between cores BO19_32 and BO19_66 pose some uncertainties as no clear and distinct layers could be identified. The depth scale used for the composite2 depths refers to cm composite depth (cmcd).
Age-depth model
Core sediments were sieved for organic remains usable for accelerator mass spectrometer radiocarbon dating (AMS 14C). In total, 13 samples of small, terrestrial fragments were measured at the Laboratory for the Analysis of Radiocarbon with AMS (LARA), University of Bern (Szidat et al. 2014) (Tab. 1). The radiocarbon ages were calibrated by using the IntCal20 calibration curve (Reimer et al. 2020) within the software Bacon v2.5.8 (Blaauw and Christen 2011). The software was also used to create an age model for the composite2 section. In this manuscript, we refer to the weighted mean age rounded to decades when providing ages and age ranges.
Results
GPR stratigraphy
The GPR line (Fig. 3a) images in detail the stratigraphic architecture of the shallow-water zone down to a sediment depth of ~ 2–3 m. Based on the geometrical properties (e.g., shape, thickness, continuity, and inclination) of the reflections, four radar facies (R1–4) were distinguished; R1 (oldest) to R3 (youngest) form a conformable stratigraphic succession representing three distinct periods. R4 is a locally confined radar facies that is embedded within R3 (Hornung 2018): R1 shows a continuous, high-amplitude reflection at the top with a sharp boundary to the overlying facies and very little further signal penetration. R2 is characterized by continuous, parallel inclined low-amplitude reflections with intercalated discontinuous, chaotic very low-amplitude reflections and diffraction hyperbolas. R3 initially shows continuous parallel high- to medium-amplitude reflections, which are generally inclined towards the lake forming clinoforms. Subsequent clinoforms are intercalated with low-amplitude, discontinuous, and wavy to chaotic reflections. Both sub-types of R3 show repetitive patterns of high to low amplitudes forming distinct reflection packages repeating in hierarchical patterns showing larger-scale trends. The inclination of clinoforms increases towards the lake basin and their shape converts from concave to convex. R4 shows a rather chaotic facies; it is formed by the mound itself and is defined by overlapping, hyperbolic high-amplitude reflections that are interpreted to be caused by the individual rocky blocks in an unmigrated GPR section (diffraction hyperbolas). Some high-amplitude reflections (single blocks) continue in an inclined, lakeward direction. The GPR line clearly documents that the mound (R4) is embedded within R3 indicating that it is not connected to the R2 or R1 units below (Fig. 3a).
Core sedimentology and stratigraphy
Based on macro- and microscopic sedimentological description and petrophysical and geochemical analysis, the core lithologies were grouped into ten lithotypes. Fig. 4 provides detailed information of all lithotypes with characteristic core photographs as well as their sedimentological, petrophysical and geochemical signatures. In addition, the lowermost two sections of the composite core are shown in Fig. 5 including their CT images. The succession of lithotypes is further divided into three stratigraphic units I–III (Fig. 3b). Figure 6 displays the succession of the stratigraphic units as part of the composite2 section with the composite depth profiles of wet bulk density, magnetic susceptibility, sediment composition, PSD and AMS 14C measurements. Unit I (Lithotype J, 1203.9–1243.9 cmcd) is built up by beige to brown, homogeneous clayey silt to silty clay with medium- to coarse-sized gravel forming a matrix-supported diamictic fabric (Fig. 5). Unit I shows low content in carbonate (27–36 wt%) and high content in siliciclastic (63–71 wt%). Unit I is also characterized by high magnetic susceptibility (up to 44.4 SI*10−5) and the highest density (1.9–2.4 g/cm3). Stratigraphic Unit I was only recovered in coring site BO19_100. Unit II (lithotypes E-I, 1023.3–1203.9 cmcd) shows a succession of grey, partially black-spotted, finely laminated to homogeneous clayey silt (lithotypes E and F), a silty, clayey sand layer (Lithotype G), and beige to yellowish and brown, laminated silt and clay with scattered gravel clasts (lithotypes H and I). Similar to Unit I, Unit II shows low contents of carbonate and high contents of siliciclastic. The magnetic susceptibility falls in the same range as in Unit I, wet bulk density is slightly decreased (1.2–2.2 g/cm3). Unit II was recovered in coring sites BO19_66 and BO19_100 with the exception that Lithotype G (silty, clayey sand) only occurs in two sections of coring site BO19_100. Unit III (lithotypes A-D, 0-1023.3 cmcd) consists of beige, grey and brown, fine-sandy to clayey silt with a cap of silty fine sand (Lithotype A) on top. The silt appears either laminated (lithotypes B and C) or homogeneous (Lithotype D). Snail shells appear throughout the whole succession. Unit III is characterized by the lowest wet bulk density (1.1–1.8 g/cm3) and magnetic susceptibility (− 5 to 7 * 10−5) values and the highest carbonate content (54–87 wt%). Unit III was recovered at every coring site. From ~ 950 to 900 cmcd (~ 13,400–12,820 cal. yrs BP), a first decrease of carbonate content (down to ~ 55 wt%) is observed. An upcore trend of decreasing carbonate content then occurs starting from ~ 750 cmcd (~ 9010 cal. yrs BP) to a plateau of minimum values of ~ 55 wt% at ~ 450–350 cmcd (~5750–4950 cal. yrs BP), which is overlain by a subsequent rise until the top of the core. The siliciclastic content in- and decreases inversely proportional to the carbonate content. For the same interval, we also observe a respective decrease, plateau, and subsequent increase in the contents of the clay and fine silt grain fractions. This is also expressed by in- and decreasing mean and median grain sizes.
Surface-sediment samples
The results of the geochemical (CNS, FTIRS) and PSD-LDA analysis performed on the surface samples are plotted against their respective water depth (Fig. 7). The PSD shows the highest proportions of sand (45–90 vol%) in a water depth of 0.5–1.5 m below which a drop to the lowest values (< 10 vol%) occurs. The proportion of sand then peaks again at 3.0 m water depth with 60 vol% and decreases steadily towards 20 vol% at 5.0 m water depth. A subsequent rise towards 50% is observed from 5.0 to 6.0 m water depth. In general, a trend of decreasing mean and median grain size with increasing water depth can be deduced. Carbonate content generally increases with increasing water depth: it rises from ~ 30–50 wt% in a water depth < 3 m towards contents of 50–65 wt% in water depths of 3–6 m. The siliciclastic content inversely decreases with increasing water depth.
Age model
Results of the AMS 14C measurements, calibrated ages and composite depths of the samples are provided in Table 1. From the 13 analyzed samples, one measurement (BE-16971.1.1) was not measurable. Another sample (BE-16965.1.1) did not follow the general age-depth trend and was interpreted as reworked material and therefore excluded from the age model. The remaining samples lie in the age range from ~ 14,390 to 3270 cal. yrs BP, i.e., from the late glacial throughout most of the Holocene. The age model (Fig. 8) covers the sedimentary succession of Unit III and ranges from ~ 14,440 to 1960 cal. yrs BP. Coring site BO19_32 was specifically selected to cover the sediments corresponding to the prehistoric shelf edge the mound was constructed on. The GPR reflection corresponding to the prehistoric shelf edge was extrapolated to the coring site (Fig. 3). Using this approach, the sediments deposited during mound construction are expected at ~ 425 cmcd. Using this approach, Mound no. 5 was dated to ~ 5520 cal. yrs BP (sample BE-11676.1.1), coinciding with radiocarbon dated wood that was excavated directly in the mounds (Leuzinger et al. 2021).
Discussion
Core-to-GPR correlation
The three radar facies R1–R3 identified by GPR are correlated to the sedimentological record of the cores (Fig. 3b). Facies R4, representing the mound, was not recovered in the cores, as the applied coring device is not able to penetrate boulders. The boundary between R3 and R2 could not be correlated to a lithologic change in the composite core BO19_100. There is neither a distinct sedimentological layer nor a noticeable change in the petrophysical data so that radar facies R3 and R2 together are correlated to stratigraphic Unit III. Due to limited radar penetration, the boundary between R2 and R1 cannot be traced from the shore- proximal area to coring site BO19_100 closest to the shore (Fig. 3). However, extrapolating the prominent reflection clearly suggests its occurrence in composite cores BO19_100 and BO19_66 coinciding with the prominent changes in lithology and petrophysical data at the Unit II–III boundary (Fig. 3). Therefore, we attribute R1 to stratigraphic Unit II. Unit I is only recovered in composite core BO19_100 at a depth of ~ 4.9 m. Due to the maximum penetration depth of the GPR of ~ 2–3 m, Unit I was not identified in the GPR campaign.
Interpretation of GPR data and core lithologies: depositional evolution of the shelf area
The matrix-supported diamictic fabric of the lowermost stratigraphic Unit I is interpreted as till deposited during the last glaciation. It correlates to the basal lodgement till that covers extensive areas of the hills south of Lake Constance (Zaugg et al. 2008). The top of a gravel-rich bed visible in the CT scan (Fig. 5) marks the boundary to overlying stratigraphic Unit II comprised of more finely laminated sediments. Scattered, individual gravel clasts coincide with peaks in wet bulk density and magnetic susceptibility. The change from Unit I to Unit II is interpreted as the final retreat of the Rhine Glacier from the Lake Constance area after a short readvance (“Stein am Rhein” stage) after 20,600 cal. yrs BP (Kamleitner et al. 2023). Afterwards, a cold proglacial lake dominated by clastic sedimentation formed and led to deposition of Unit II. Individual clasts are interpreted to represent dropstones, i.e., glacial debris from floating icebergs, indicating that the glacial front still was in contact with Lake Constance. Unit II thus represents the clastic pro- and postglacial sedimentation (Wessels 1998c). The change to the carbonate-rich sediments of Unit III documents the transition towards a more temperate lake and onset of biologic productivity, resulting in the deposition of endogenic lacustrine chalk (Wessels 1998c). The continuous, parallel reflections recognized in the GPR data represent regular deposition in periods of calm weather, whereas intercalated, chaotic reflections are interpreted as storm deposits (tempestites). Repeated reflection packages indicating low-energy sediments at their base and terminating in tempestites point to pronounced short-term climate fluctuations superpositioned on long-term trends. These mixed clastic-endogenic lake deposits create a prograding shelf-edge system. Controlled by wave-base remobilization and currents, the laterally stacked clinoforms identified by GPR indicate that the shelf edge prograded from a shore-proximal location over 100 m out into the lake. GPR data and sediment cores clearly show that the mounds are separated from the glaciolacustrine deposits (Unit II) as they are deposited on top of the laterally prograding lacustrine shelf deposits (Unit I; Fig. 3b). This excludes the mounds to be a natural relict of buried elongated till such as a side moraine, clearly pointing towards an anthropogenic origin. The prehistoric shelf edge coinciding with the mounds is marked by radar reflections with exceptionally high amplitudes (arrow in Fig. 3a). They are likely caused by rocks rolling down the edge during mound construction or destruction, confirming the assumption that the mound was constructed at the shelf edge at that time. Radiocarbon dating of the uppermost layers of Unit II and the lowermost layers of Unit III shows that proglacial clastic sedimentation lasted at least until ~ 14,400 cal. yrs BP and ceased latest at ca. 14,000 cal. yrs BP. This age range suggests that calcite precipitation started with the end of the Oldest Dryas and onset of the Bølling-Allerød (Clark et al. 2012). The short interval of lower carbonate content from 950 to 900 cmcd (~ 13,400–12,820 cal. yrs BP) is interpreted as drop in productivity due to changing climate conditions, which coincides, within the uncertainties of the age model, with the Younger Dryas cold period (~ 12,900–11,700 cal. yrs BP) (Clark et al. 2012). This signal is also reported from other cores recovered from the deeper part of Lake Constance (Schaller et al. 2022).
Lake-level changes and implications for mound construction
Since the deglaciation, the lake level of Lower Lake Constance is limited by the height of multiple alluvial fans deposited in the narrow strait between the villages of Öhningen (Germany) and Eschenz (Switzerland) (Müller 2011) and the outlet of Upper Lake Constance at the city of Konstanz. The lowest possible level of Lake Constance as defined by the minimal elevation of the underlying moraine in the outflow area and a minimal depth of the outflowing Rhine amounts to 392.5 m a.s.l. (Leuzinger et al. 2021), which is still ~ 1 m above the crest of mound no. 5. Periods of higher lake levels are commonly associated with higher annual precipitation, colder summer temperatures and a reduced seasonal vegetation period. Times of lower lake levels, in contrast, are interpreted as periods of low precipitation and rather warm temperatures (Müller 2011). Using a series of prehistoric morphologic and archaeologic lake-level markers (i.e., palaeo beach terraces and cultural layers), a general decreasing lake level from 400 to 401 m a.s.l. at 9000–8000 cal. yrs BP towards 392–394 m a.s.l. at 5000–3700 cal. yrs BP is inferred. Afterwards, the lake level is interpreted to increase gradually to a maximum elevation of 397 m a.s.l. during the Roman period (Müller 2011; Vogt 2020). This general lake-level reconstruction can now be compared with sediment-core and surface-sediment data: the modern calibration obtained by the surface sediments indicate (i) a slight increase in carbonate content and (ii) a decrease in grain size with increasing water depth (Fig. 7). Applying these trends to the composite2 section above 750 cmcd (Fig. 6) indicates a trend to decreasing and subsequent increasing water depth, with a mid-Holocene low stand from ~ 350–450 cmcd (~ 5750–4950 cal. yrs BP) which coincides with the extrapolated prehistoric shelf edge at 425 cmcd (~ 5520 cal. yrs BP). In combination with radiocarbon dating of the wooden piles found on the mound (5550–5250 cal. yrs BP; Leuzinger et al. 2021), it is interpreted that the mounds were constructed during a period of low lake levels when the shoreline was closer to the lineament of the mounds as it is today. However, the trends inferred from the modern surface-samples transect are not fully unambiguous and may not be representative for the whole area along the chain of mounds. Besides the water depth, other factors like temperature or small-scale current-related processes probably control the grain size and carbonate content in the shallow-water area. In addition, the gradual decline in carbonate content measured from 720 to 400 cmcd (~ 8520–5330 cal. yrs BP) is also reported from other Lake Constance sediment studies and is linked to the filling of lakes in the upstream Rhine Valley that acted as sediment traps (Wessels 1998b). This led to an increased supply of allochthonous sediment into Lake Constance and might cause part of the observed decreasing carbonate concentrations. Besides, the initial shallowing inferred from the composite2 core can be related to the aggrading nature of sedimentation. Furthermore, multiproxy records report a global, centennial scale climatic change occurring at ~ 5600–5000 cal. yrs BP in west-central Europe that is expressed in general colder and wetter climate and referred to as the onset of the Neoglaciation period or the mid-Holocene climatic reversal (Magny and Haas 2004; Magny et al. 2006). Lake-level data from the Jura Mountains, the Swiss Plateau and the French Alps document a phase of higher lake level at 5650–5200 cal. yrs BP (Magny 2004, 2007). On the other hand, the water-depth increase inferred from the upper part of the composite2 core is significant, as it works against ongoing accumulation. Besides, the GPR data show a change in the geometry of the reflections in stratigraphic Unit III (lacustrine chalk): from flat line reflections in the late-/postglacial they develop into a more concave shape in the first half of the Holocene. Around the horizon of mound construction, another change towards planar and finally convex reflections occurs. This change in reflection geometry implies a shift in coastal morphology, currents or water depth that are possibly related to a lowering of the lake level. Moreover, at the archaeological site of Arbon-Bleiche 3, ~ 12 km southwest of the study area, cultural layers were deposited at an exceptional lake level low stand at 5334–5320 cal. yrs BP (Jacomet et al. 2004; Magny et al. 2006), which was followed by a sudden rise that contributed to the abandonment of the settlement. In general, cultural layers and other archaeological findings along the southern shore of Lake Constance from the time of mound construction (i.e., the change from Pfyn- to Horgen-culture) are rare. This could be explained by subsequent erosion due to a rapid lake-level rise. We therefore propose that the mounds were deposited during a short scale interval of lowered lake level following a phase of higher lake level at 5600–5500 cal. yrs BP and before a transgression starting at 5320 cal. yrs BP (Fig. 9).
Conclusions
The southern shelf of Lake Constance holds one of the largest Neolithic structures in Europe composed of ~ 170 submerged mounds aligned over a distance of 10 km in water depths of 3–5 m. Combining data from ground penetrating radar and from a transect of sediment cores shows that the mounds were formed on a prograding shelf composed of Holocene mixed clastic-endogenic lake sediments that overlie late glacial siliciclastic sediments and glacial till. Unlike previously speculated, the mounds are thus not part of a natural elevated ridge, such as a side moraine of the Rhine Glacier, but are of anthropogenic origin. The Holocene lake sediments form a wave-base and current-controlled prograding shelf system with the mounds being constructed at the prehistoric shelf edge. Radiocarbon dating of the cored sediments corresponding to the prehistoric shelf edge suggests a Neolithic age (5600–5300 cal. yrs BP) for the time of mound formation. This is in accordance with ages inferred from wood fragments from one of the mounds. Based on a water-depth calibration of carbonate content and grain size from recent surface samples in combination with findings from nearby archaeological sites, we conclude that the mounds probably were constructed during a rather short interval of relatively low lake level during a phase of climatic cooling that was followed by a transgression. Ultimately, the geophysical, sedimentological and geochemical data, combined with the morphology-based lowest-possible lake level, indicate that the mounds were at least partially submerged during their construction.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Stefano Fabbri and Valentin Nigg for help during the coring campaign. Nicole Schwendener from the Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Bern is acknowledged for performing the CT scans. We thank Julijana Gajic from the Institute of Geological Sciences (UniBE) for performing the CNS and FTIRS analysis, Maarika Bischof and Daniela Fischer from the Institute of Geography (UniBE) for their help with the PSD analysis, Edith Vogel from the LARA laboratory (UniBe) for the sample preparation for radiocarbon analysis, and Katrina Kremer from the Institute of Geological Sciences (UniBE) for her advice with the age model. We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers who provided constructive and helpful comments on the first version of the manuscript.
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Open access funding provided by University of Bern. The project received financial support from the Archaeological Department of the Canton of Thurgau.
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DP wrote the main manuscript text and prepared all the figures as part of his master thesis, which was supervised and supported by FA. FG and TK. collected the surface sediment samples. JH carried out the GPR survey and provided input to the geophysical methods, results and data interpretation sections. HV processed the FTIRS raw data and provided input to the geochemical methods, results and data interpretation sections. SSc provided input to the sediment-core data processing and interpretation. SSz coordinated the AMS 14C measurements and provided input to the age model method and results sections. SB, HB and UL. provided input to the archaeological background and lake-level changes sections. MW provided input to the site, sediment and interpretation sections. All authors reviewed and approved the final manuscript.
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Perler, D., Benguerel, S., Brem, H. et al. Postglacial evolution of the Lake Constance shelf and its relation to a 10-km long chain of submerged Neolithic mounds. J Paleolimnol 72, 221–239 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-024-00322-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10933-024-00322-2