Jessica Henkner
University of Tübingen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jessica Henkner.
Royal Society Open Science | 2018
Jessica Henkner; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Sean S. Downey; Markus Fuchs; Bruce R. James; Andrea Junge; Thomas Knopf; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn
Colluvial deposits, as the correlate sediments of human-induced soil erosion, depict an excellent archive of land use and landscape history as indicators of human–environment interactions. This study establishes a chronostratigraphy of colluvial deposits and reconstructs past land use dynamics in the Swabian Jura, the Baar and the Black Forest in SW Germany. In the agriculturally favourable Baar area multiple main phases of colluvial deposition, and thus intensified land use, can be identified from the Neolithic to the Modern times. In the unfavourable Swabian Jura increased colluvial deposition began later compared to the more favourable areas in the Baar. The same holds true for the unfavourable areas of the Black Forest, but intensified land use can only be reconstructed for the Middle Ages and Early Modern times instead of for the Bronze and Iron Age as in the Swabian Jura. Land use intensity and settlement dynamics represented by thick, multilayered colluvial deposits increase in the Baar and the Black Forest during the Middle Ages. In between those phases of geomorphodynamic activity and colluviation, stable phases occur, interpreted as phases with sustainable land use or without human presence.
Ecology and Society | 2017
Sandra Teuber; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Jessica Henkner; Thomas Knopf; Peter Kühn; Thomas Scholten
Today’s global challenges (e.g., food security) are not unprecedented in human history. Starting with the Neolithic transition, the agricultural sector and society underwent several cultural and technological changes and endured natural challenges. These challenges and changes are analyzed by using the adaptive cycle metaphor and the social-ecological system as tools to show the complexity of human–environment interactions and their development. The analysis relies on archaeological, pedological, and botanical research, and demonstrates the importance of interdisciplinary work. Agrarian soil use as a social-ecological system persisted in Central Europe for 7000 years and underwent an adaptive cycle from the Neolithic transition to industrialization. With agriculture’s mechanization, a second adaptive cycle started. The resilience of agrarian soil use for thousands of years shows that agriculture, as a human–environmental interaction, is adaptive to change. Understanding past agricultural challenges and changes using archaeological and soil scientific data puts the present development into a new perspective. A cultural perspective on soils might trigger soil protection and sustainable land use in a technical as well as political domain. Applying social-ecological system and adaptive cycle concepts to this interdisciplinary reconstruction of agrarian soil use illustrates their usefulness for archaeology and soil science.
Catena | 2017
Jessica Henkner; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Sean S. Downey; Markus Fuchs; Bruce R. James; Thomas Knopf; Thomas Scholten; Sandra Teuber; Peter Kuhn
Geoderma | 2016
Jessica Henkner; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2018
Jessica Henkner; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Thomas Knopf; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn
Archive | 2017
Jessica Henkner; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn
Schriften des Vereins für Geschichte und Naturgeschichte der Baar | 2015
Thomas Knopf; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Jessica Henkner; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn
한국토양비료학회 학술발표회 초록집 | 2014
Jessica Henkner; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Thomas Knopf; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kuehn
WSL Berichte | 2014
Jessica Henkner; Caroline Heiri; Raphaela Tinner; Jan Wunder; Peter Brang
Archive | 2014
Jessica Henkner; Jan J. Ahlrichs; Thomas Knopf; Thomas Scholten; Peter Kühn