Articles | Volume 47, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.3285/eg.47.1.10
https://doi.org/10.3285/eg.47.1.10
01 Jan 1997
 | 01 Jan 1997

220 m Altpleistozän im „Heidelberger Loch"

Fritz Fezer

Abstract. The Neckar river passes the Odenwald mountains in a gorge (tectonic uplift) and flows in Heidelberg into the Upper Rhine graben, which sinks here by 0,2 to 0,75 mm/year. In this deltalike voluminous sediment the whole Quarternary is preserved. In the Cold Ages braided rivers spread gravel and sand. In the interglacials a meandering Neckar sedimented loam, sand or thin layers of gravel. In the warm stages from 35 to 7 the curve of the clay content was tuned to the 180-temperature curves of the oceans.

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