What the landscape can tell: An integrative stratigraphic prospection approach to localize a Black Death mass grave in Erfurt/Central Germany
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In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 21, No. 1, e0337410, 01.2026.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - What the landscape can tell
T2 - An integrative stratigraphic prospection approach to localize a Black Death mass grave in Erfurt/Central Germany
AU - Hein, Michael
AU - Usmar, Nik
AU - Engel, Annabell
AU - Rabiger-Völlmer, Johannes
AU - Schmidt, Johannes
AU - Silbermann, Matthias
AU - Pohle, Marco
AU - Nießen, Iris
AU - Offermann, Martin
AU - Werther, Lukas
AU - Schneider, Birgit
AU - Tannhäuser, Christian
AU - Herbig, Alexander
AU - Nováček, Jan
AU - Werban, Ulrike
AU - Bauch, Martin
AU - Zielhofer, Christoph
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2026 Hein et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2026/1
Y1 - 2026/1
N2 - The Black Death pandemic (1346–53 AD) caused a 30–50% population decline across Europe. For the city of Erfurt in Thuringia, substantial human losses and corresponding mass graves are well-documented in historical archives. The aim of our study is to localize these mass graves in the nearby deserted village of Neuses in order to validate the written sources and to obtain skeletal remains for future anthropological and archeogenetic analyses. Here we present our integrative approach of historical research and minimally-invasive stratigraphic and geophysical prospection. Within the area of interest, narrowed down by historical accounts and GIS implementations, we applied percussion coring and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). Coupled geophysical and coring sections help elucidate the late Quaternary sedimentary processes as an essential natural background for more detailed geoarcheological prospections. They allow to designate two distinct soil zones with consistent stratigraphical and pedogenic sequences: (1) a Chernozem zone and (2) a Black Floodplain Soil (humic fluvisol) zone. The distribution and extent of these zones co-determined the internal structure of the former village Neuses and the positioning of the presumed associated Black Death mass graves. Our approach enables a preliminary reconstruction of the medieval subsurface architecture, despite large-scale 20th century ground modification. We identified a belowground pit structure, visible in both, the borehole sequences and ERT sections. Recovered bones have been AMS radiocarbon-dated to the 14th century AD. Since confirmed and precisely-dated locations of Black Death mass graves are rare in Europe and are commonly found by chance during construction works, our systematic discovery of a possible plague pit may help to advance the research on the origin, spread and evolution of the Yersinia pestis pathogen throughout this pandemic as well as on societal coping mechanisms during epidemic outbreaks. Furthermore, our combination of methods holds the potential to successfully resolve the mapping of similarly demanding sites for archeological and forensic investigations.
AB - The Black Death pandemic (1346–53 AD) caused a 30–50% population decline across Europe. For the city of Erfurt in Thuringia, substantial human losses and corresponding mass graves are well-documented in historical archives. The aim of our study is to localize these mass graves in the nearby deserted village of Neuses in order to validate the written sources and to obtain skeletal remains for future anthropological and archeogenetic analyses. Here we present our integrative approach of historical research and minimally-invasive stratigraphic and geophysical prospection. Within the area of interest, narrowed down by historical accounts and GIS implementations, we applied percussion coring and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). Coupled geophysical and coring sections help elucidate the late Quaternary sedimentary processes as an essential natural background for more detailed geoarcheological prospections. They allow to designate two distinct soil zones with consistent stratigraphical and pedogenic sequences: (1) a Chernozem zone and (2) a Black Floodplain Soil (humic fluvisol) zone. The distribution and extent of these zones co-determined the internal structure of the former village Neuses and the positioning of the presumed associated Black Death mass graves. Our approach enables a preliminary reconstruction of the medieval subsurface architecture, despite large-scale 20th century ground modification. We identified a belowground pit structure, visible in both, the borehole sequences and ERT sections. Recovered bones have been AMS radiocarbon-dated to the 14th century AD. Since confirmed and precisely-dated locations of Black Death mass graves are rare in Europe and are commonly found by chance during construction works, our systematic discovery of a possible plague pit may help to advance the research on the origin, spread and evolution of the Yersinia pestis pathogen throughout this pandemic as well as on societal coping mechanisms during epidemic outbreaks. Furthermore, our combination of methods holds the potential to successfully resolve the mapping of similarly demanding sites for archeological and forensic investigations.
KW - Biology
KW - Ecosystems Research
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105026925180
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0337410
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0337410
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 41499421
AN - SCOPUS:105026925180
VL - 21
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
SN - 1932-6203
IS - 1
M1 - e0337410
ER -
