Lionel Visset
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Lionel Visset.
The Holocene | 2006
Jean-Jacques Macaire; Jacques Bernard; Christian Di-Giovanni; Florent Hinschberger; Nicole Limondin-Lozouet; Lionel Visset
Quantification in grams per metres squared per year of the sediment accumulation in a flood plain (‘marsh’) located in the southwestern Parisian basin showed that there is no close relationship between the accumulation of organic matter (OM) and mineral matter (MM) during the late Holocene, and provided an accurate view of the distinct yield and storage conditions of both sediment components. Endogenic OM accumulation in peaty sediments is not related to the climate but to felling of the alder forest and its substitution by Cyperaceae and paludal taxa in the marsh (Iron Age and Middle Ages). MM accumulation expresses mainly the sediment yield on the slopes, determined by landuse. During an initial phase (from the late Neolithic to the early Middle Ages), land-use change from crop cultivation to pastureland, possibly related to climate deterioration, led to a decrease in the sediment yield. During a second phase, since the early Middle Ages, the considerable development of crop cultivation over pasturing, even during periods of climate deterioration (such as the ‘Little Ice Age’), led to a sharp increase in sediment yield. However, although sediment yield was high, the hydrodynamics in the fen did not favour particle retention. Thus, since the Neolithic, yield and storage of OM and MM sediment have been marked by human activities, initially with high climatic stress, but since the Middle Ages without significant climatic stress.
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 1997
Delphine Barbier; Lionel Visset
Logné, one of three raised bogs (Hochmoor) in the Massif Armorican, was officially designated as a nature reserve in 1987 and is of considerable ecological interest from botanical, ornithological and herpetological aspects. Palynological investigations reveal the history of local and regional vegetation during the last ca. 4000 years. From the end of the Neolithic Age to the present day, changes in the bog appear to have been considerably influenced by variations in local watertable level that may be of natural origin or caused by human activity. Alder carr withOsmunda regalis, which was the dominant vegetation around the periphery of the bog at ca. 4200 B.P., underwent many changes. Its final demise occurred in Gallo-Roman times when the local landscape took on a distinctly open appearance. The first clear evidence for cereal cultivation relates to the Bronze Age. After a decline in farming at the beginning of the Iron Age, there was a strong renewal of farming in the La Tène period, which included a distinct arable component and also records forJuglans andCastanea pollen. The timing of the introduction of walnut and chestnut to the Massif Armorican is discussed.
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2001
Anne-Laure Cyprien; Lionel Visset
Abstract. The town of Carquefou, some 10 km northeast of Nantes on the left bank of the river Erdre, occupies a site long associated with human activity. During road construction east of the town, ditches, enclosures and post holes characteristic of the late la Tène were discovered at the locality of “Le Clouet”, which led us to obtain core samples from a nearby peat bog. These investigations indicated the changes in vegetation since 3915±95 uncal B.P., [2828 (2459) 2074 cal B.C.]. The slopes in the surroundings of the bog have been relatively treeless since the Bronze Age, but a very open woodland vegetation composed of Tilia, Corylus and Quercus has been maintained until the present day. In the area around the bog, and Alnus wood with an undergrowth of Cyperaceae was the dominant vegetation, despite some changes probably related to human occupation since the Bronze Age. Beginning at 955±35 uncal B.P. [1004 (1036, 1144, 1146) 1181 cal A.D.], in the Middle Ages, the alders disappeared almost totally, apparently because of clearance or an increase in water level. Human presence led to intensified cultivation of different crops including Cannabis and especially Cerealia. Finally, the presence of a variety of anthropogenic indicator plants (Cichorioideae, Asteraceae, Plantago lanceolata, etc.) suggests that cattle were reared in the vicinity of the site.
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 1994
Lionel Visset
As part of a new research programme, studies of peat bogs in Brittany are being carried out to trace the changes that have occurred in the course of time, and to determine the different regional stages related to the human activities of land clearance and agriculture. In this context, a palynological study of the Kerfontaine peat bog was undertaken to consider changes in local and regional vegetation dating from after about 7800 B.P. Local vegetation history from Neolithic times until the Middle Ages involved a succession of twelve pollen zones clearly related to variations in water level resulting from natural or anthropogenic influences. The dominant vegetation was alder carr, bog-myrtle mire and birch woods. Heath vegetation, which appeared at the end of the Iron Age, developed during the Gallo-Roman period, finally invading the entire bog in the Middle Ages. Regional vegetation history was characterised, among other things, by the presence of beech woods which developed after 3000 B.P. and then declined during the Middle Ages in conjunction with an increase of cultivation between the 8th and 11th centuries A.D., an indication of great activity during the Carolingian period. Human activity reached its peak around 1800 A.D. at the time of the first pine plantations.
Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Iii-sciences De La Vie-life Sciences | 2000
Delphine Barbier; Lionel Visset
Palynological analysis of the basal sedimentary sequence of a peat bog in the upper northeastern part of Mayenne (Massif Armoricain, France) revealed the existence of two temperate oscillations towards the end of the Weichselian glaciation, which were related chronologically by AMS C14 dating to the Kesselt and Tursac interstadials already reported at cave sites. Pollen diagrams recorded mesothermophilic arboreal taxa apparently disseminated from a refuge station possibly corresponding to the Erve valley.
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2007
Camille Joly; Laurent Barillé; Mathilde Barreau; Alban Mancheron; Lionel Visset
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2002
Jean-Jacques Macaire; Saïda Bellemlih; Christian Di-Giovanni; Patrick De Luca; Lionel Visset; Jacques Bernard
Comptes Rendus Palevol | 2002
Lionel Visset; Anne-Laure Cyprien; Nathalie Carcaud; Abdelouahed Ouguerram; Delphine Barbier; Jacques Bernard
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2004
Anne-Laure Cyprien; Lionel Visset; Nathalie Carcaud
Revue archéologique de l'ouest | 1996
Lionel Visset; Jean L'Helgouach; Jacques Bernard