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2. Taming Fogo Island: Late-Holocene volcanism, natural fires and land use as recorded in a scoria-cone sediment sequence in Cabo Verde.
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Castilla-Beltrán, Alvaro, Monteath, Alistair, Jensen, Britta J.L., Nascimento, Lea de, María Fernández-Palacios, José, Strandberg, Nichola, Edwards, Mary, and Nogué, Sandra
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FOSSIL microorganisms , *LAND use , *PIGEON pea , *VOLCANISM , *OBSIDIAN , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Cabo Verde remained uninhabited until 1460 CE, when European sailors founded a settlement in Santiago, and soon after in Fogo island. The degree to which different island ecosystems in Cabo Verde have been transformed by humans remains uncertain because of a scarcity of historical information and archaeological evidence. Disentangling these processes from natural ones is complicated in islands with a history of volcanic impacts and other natural hazards. In this paper, we apply microfossil (pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs and phytoliths) and sedimentological analyses (granulometry, X-ray diffraction, loss on ignition and tephrostratigraphy) to a 2-m sediment sequence deposited in a scoria cone from 4100 cal year BP (calibrated years before 1950 CE) to the present. The organic-rich basal sediments indicate that between 4100 and 2600 cal year BP the pre-settlement landscape of Fogo was an open grassland, where fire was infrequent and/or small-scale. An increase in volcanic glass deposition after 2600 cal year BP, peaking ca. 1200 cal year BP, suggests that there was a progressive activation of Fogo's volcanic activity, contemporaneous with increased fire frequency and erosion pulses, but with little impact on local grassland vegetation. While dating uncertainty is high, the first evidence of intensive local land use by early settlers was in the form of cultivation of Zea mays, abundant spores of coprophilous fungi (i.e. Sporormiella), and peaks in charcoal concentrations between 800 and 400 cal year BP. This was followed by large increases in pollen from pigeon pea (Cajanus), a diverse array of exotic trees (Cupressus, Grevillea), and invasive shrubs (Lantana). The introduction of these taxa is part of recent human effort to 'tame' this steep, dry and hazardous island by reducing erosion and providing firewood. An important outcome of these efforts, however, is a loss of fragile native biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Holocene evolution of the Cávado estuary (NW Portugal).
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Granja, Helena, Gómez-Orellana, Luis, Costa, Ana Luísa, Morais, Rui, Oliveira, César, Ramil-Rego, Pablo, and Pinho, José Luís
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *ESTUARIES , *FIFTEENTH century , *SILT , *PALYNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper aims to contribute to the understanding of the Holocene evolution of the Cávado estuarine coastal system (Portugal) and the adjacent terrestrial areas, using a multidisciplinary approach, which includes geomorphology, sedimentology, palynology, radiocarbon and history. During the Early Holocene, the Cávado environment was characterized by the dominance of coarse sediments especially in the most westward areas, corresponding to fluvial energetic dynamics. During the Middle Holocene, the presence of wetlands dominated especially in the most sheltered areas. The pollen data reflect the predominance of forests during the initial phases of the introduction of agriculture, with a significant presence of humid forests. Between 4240 and 3980 cal BP, a sudden marine flooding took place over the peat. During the Late Holocene, there was a succession of low, high and again low energy fluvial environments in the eastward sheltered areas, while high energy dominated in the Fão channel entrance, with marine influence on the uppermost units. The pollen content reflects a situation of high human influence, with a poor representation of natural forests and a predominance of agrosystems, related to the rise of the Cávado estuary as a port during the heyday of the city of Braga during the Roman and Suevian periods, as described in historical texts and archaeological research. In connection with this growth, the pollen data show the existence of local Pinus plantations related to shipbuilding and repair in the port. During these times, the estuary was larger and open to the sea at Fão. After the 15th century, with the general silting of coastal areas, the inlet closed and the river mouth was displaced to the North. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Provenance of fine-grained sediments along the South Bohai Coast, China since the mid-Holocene, and its implications for understanding coastal evolution and anthropogenic influences.
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Sun, Xiao, Li, Yan, Yi, Liang, Zhang, Jingran, Bi, Jianhua, Chen, Guangquan, and Hu, Ke
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PALEOGEOGRAPHY , *OPTICALLY stimulated luminescence dating , *ACCELERATOR mass spectrometry , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Discriminating the provenance of fine-grained sediments is crucial for reconstructing paleogeography, sedimentary processes, and paleoclimate. In this paper, we investigate the South Bohai Coast to better understand source-to-sink systems in East Asia. This region is influenced by both distant sources such as the large-scale Yellow River and small local river sources flowing from the Luzhong Mountain area. Two Holocene sedimentary cores, dated using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) 14C chronology, were used to investigate the provenance of the fine-grained sediments over the last 7 kyrs. Clay mineralogy and relevant non-linear modeling were employed for provenance discrimination. The results show that the fine-grained sediments along the South Bohai Coast were mainly derived from the Yellow River during the periods of 7.0–5.4 ka and 4.5–2.6 ka, respectively, while the input from the Luzhong Mountain-derived rivers was greater during 5.4–4.5 ka and 2.6–0.2 ka, respectively. Fluvial activities and marine-terrestrial interaction driven by climate factors such as East Asian winter monsoon, temperature, and precipitation in river basins, dominantly influenced the provenance of fine-grained sediments from 7.0 to 2.6 ka. Anthropogenic impact on provenance increased after 2.6 ka. The chronology of the two cores showed extremely rapid sedimentation rate transitions at 5.2 ka and 1.5 ka, respectively, very likely attributed to anthropogenic-induced rapid progradation. Our study provides a model for better understanding the paleoenvironmental and paleogeographic evolution of a coastal area where multiple sources exist. • Anthropogenically high sedimentation rate in the South Bohai Coast in late Holocene. • Provenance discrimination of the fine-grained sediments in the South Bohai Coast since the mid-Holocene. • The major source of the fine-grained sediments in the South Bohai Coast changed episodically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Holocene marine deposits in the Bohai Sea: Depocenters, sediment sources, and oceanic and tectonic influences.
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Li, Xishuang, Zhao, Yuexia, Yang, Zuosheng, Qiao, Shuqing, Liu, Baohua, Xie, Qiuhong, Saito, Yoshiki, and Liu, Chenguang
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MARINE sediments , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTS , *FAULT zones , *ESTUARIES , *NEOTECTONICS - Abstract
The Bohai Sea is a semi-enclosed shallow shelf sea that has undergone a unique sediment source-to-sink process in the past. Despite this, our knowledge about the sediment budget, existence of depocenters and the factors controlling depocenter formation during the Holocene remains limited. This paper aims to address these gaps by estimating the Holocene marine deposit thickness and sediment budget in the Bohai Sea using high-resolution subbottom profiles. The results reveal that the mean thickness of Holocene marine deposits is approximately 7.8 m and a maximum thickness of 28 m was found in Jinzhou Bay. The Highstand System Tracts (HST) have a mean thickness of approximately 5.4 m and a maximum thickness of 25 m observed in the Jinzhou Bay. On the other hand, the Transgressive System Tracts (TST) have a mean thickness of approximately 2.5 m and a maximum thickness of 7 m in the north of the Laizhou Bay. The total accumulation in the Bohai Sea is estimated to be ∼713.97 × 109 tons, consisting of 489.28 × 109 tons from the HST and 224.69 × 109 tons from the TST. Three deposit centers were identified and estimated to be approximately 299 × 109 tons, accounting for approximately 42 % of the total Bohai Sea sediments. The development of Holocene marine deposit centers was mainly influenced by the Tanlu Fault zone and water circulations. Based on preliminary estimates, it is suggested that roughly half of the sediments dispersed from the estuaries are preserved on the Bohai Sea shelf since the maximum flooding (∼7000 cal yr BP). This research provides valuable insights for the post-glacial sedimentary and geomorphic evolution of the Bohai Sea. • Holocene marine accumulation in the Bohai Sea is estimated to be ∼713.97 × 109 tons. • Accumulation in HST is of ∼489.28 × 109 tons and that in TST is of ∼224.69 × 109 tons. • Three depocenters were identified and account for ∼42 % of the total accumulation. • Roughly half of the sediments were preserved on the shelf over the past 7000 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Holocene variations in the Asian Summer and Winter Monsoons reconstructed from extensive lacustrine sediments in the Mu Us Desert, northern China.
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Wen, Xiaohao, Telfer, Matt W., Li, Baosheng, Wang, Wei, Daley, Tim, Wang, Chen, Tian, Mengyuan, and Qiu, Mingkun
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *MONSOONS , *SUMMER , *WATERSHEDS , *WINTER , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The Salawusu River Valley cuts through the Mu Us Desert in north central China, and lies at the interface of the East Asian Summer and Winter Monsoonal regions. Exposed at numerous locations in the valley side are extensive late Quaternary deposits, consisting of interbedded aeolian sands, fluvio-lacustrine units and palaeosols. Due to the importance of the location in potentially elucidating both summer and winter monsoonal regimes, and the quality of the sedimentary record, the region has a rich history of study, and yet even within the Holocene sequence, many conflicting interpretations have arisen based on studies on different sections. This paper aims to synthesize and explore these differences by exploring the lateral continuity of the Holocene sequences along a ~ 45 km reach of the valley, and presenting new, detailed physical and geochemical analyses of three sections, focusing on the lacustrine Holocene Dagouwan Formation. The absence of the lacustrine unit at several locations confirms that rather than representing a single lake, the Dagouwan Formation instead represents a series of palaeolakes, probably at least partially hydrologically isolated from each other by aeolian sands. All begin with sand-dominated deposits during the early−/mid-Holocene, which is interpreted as the result of abundant sand-supply to the north and west, under the influence of an enhanced East Asian Winter Monsoon, and all switch to silt-dominated, more carbonate-rich deposits during the mid−/late-Holocene, which is attributed to an enhanced East Asian Summer Monsoon bringing loessic silts from the Chinese Loess Plateau to the east and south. The timing of this change, perhaps as late as 5.5 ka, supports the idea of a relatively enhancement late mid-Holocene of the summer monsoonal circulation in the region. However, despite the proximity of the sections and consistent analytical approaches, marked differences between the sections occur in all proxies studied. The timing and rate of the switch from sand- to silt-dominated lacustrine deposition varies between the sites by as much as 2000 years within just a few kilometres of each other, and at some sites the switch was gradual, whereas at others it was very rapid. Similar dramatic variations are also seen with organic carbon content, carbonate content, C:N ratio, and especially the δ13C isotopic ratio. These point to the lake basins behaving very differently, and emphasize that consideration must be given to the local geomorphology and palaeolimnological evolution of individual sections. • Differences in lacustrine Holocene monsoon records in northern China are explored. • The occurrence of the lakes is geomorphologically, not climatologically, controlled. • Different sections of similar units represent different lakes with varied histories. • Consistent changes in sediment suggest mid-Holocene decline of winter monsoon. • Study of individual sections or proxies cannot be used to infer regional climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Holocene environmental variability in the Central Ebro Basin (NE Spain) from geoarchaeological and pedological records.
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Pérez-Lambán, Fernando, Peña-Monné, José Luis, Badía-Villas, David, Picazo Millán, Jesús Vicente, Sampietro-Vattuone, María Marta, Alcolea Gracia, Marta, Aranbarri, Josu, González-Sampériz, Penélope, and Fanlo Loras, Javier
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GEOLOGICAL basins , *ARID regions , *SOIL erosion , *WATERSHEDS , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Environmental fluctuations during the Holocene caused important landscape changes in the Central Ebro Basin, which is a very sensitive region due to its semiarid climate, lithology, and continuous human presence. Severe erosion processes hinder palaeoenvironmental and archaeological record preservation. Infills of ephemeral stream valleys in semiarid environments are some of the best contexts for geoarchaeological studies. In this paper, we analyse the geomorphological processes, pedological features, and charcoal and pollen content and composition of the sedimentary sequence of La Poza Valley catchment area, with the support of additional information from La Bajada Valley. 14 C dates for 13 charcoal fragments provide the necessary chronological control. We describe 5 sedimentary units and a polycyclic sequence of six soils that covers most of the Holocene, beginning ca. 9.5 ky cal BP. Buried soils help to identify stability periods in the sedimentary sequence, while incision stages are detected through erosive contacts and terraced organisation of the sedimentary units. Charcoal and pollen content and composition, as well as the soil development, reveal an open forest of junipers and pines for the Early Holocene in the lower part of the sequence (mainly in Unit 1), very different from the current deforested landscape, also represented in the sequence (Unit 4). Thus, La Poza record shows the environment was favourable for hunter-gatherers from the Late Mesolithic and for the first Neolithic farmers. From then on, progressive degradation due to a combination of climate changes and increasing human pressure led to the current deforested landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Vertical accretion sand proxies of gaged floods along the upper Little Tennessee River, Blue Ridge Mountains, USA.
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Leigh, David S.
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HAZARDS , *FLOODS , *FLOODPLAINS , *SEDIMENTS , *RIPARIAN areas - Abstract
Understanding environmental hazards presented by river flooding has been enhanced by paleoflood analysis, which uses sedimentary records to document floods beyond historical records. Bottomland overbank deposits (e.g., natural levees, floodbasins, meander scars, low terraces) have the potential as continuous paleoflood archives of flood frequency and magnitude, but they have been under-utilized because of uncertainty about their ability to derive flood magnitude estimates. The purpose of this paper is to provide a case study that illuminates tremendous potential of bottomland overbank sediments as reliable proxies of both flood frequency and magnitude. Methods involve correlation of particle-size measurements of the coarse tail of overbank deposits (> 0.25 mm sand) from three separate sites with historical flood discharge records for the upper Little Tennessee River in the Blue Ridge Mountains of the southeastern United States. Results show that essentially all floods larger than a 20% probability event can be detected by the coarse tail of particle-size distributions, especially if the temporal resolution of sampling is annual or sub-annual. Coarser temporal resolution (1.0 to 2.5 year sample intervals) provides an adequate record of large floods, but is unable to discriminate individual floods separated by only one to three years. Measurements of > 0.25 mm sand that are normalized against a smoothed trend line through the down-column data produce highly significant correlations (R 2 values of 0.50 to 0.60 with p -values of 0.004 to < 0.001) between sand peak values and flood peak discharges, indicating that flood magnitude can be reliably estimated. In summary, bottomland overbank deposits can provide excellent continuous records of paleofloods when the following conditions are met: 1) Stable depositional sites should be chosen; 2) Analysis should concentrate on the coarse tails of particle-size distributions; 3) Sampling of sediment intervals should achieve annual or better resolution; 4) Time-series data of particle-size should be detrended to minimize variation from dynamic aspects of fluvial sedimentation that are not related to flood magnitude; and 5) Multiple sites should be chosen to allow for replication of findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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9. On the application of contemporary bulk sediment organic carbon isotope and geochemical datasets for Holocene sea-level reconstruction in NW Europe.
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Wilson, Graham P.
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CARBON isotopes , *SEDIMENTS , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SEA level , *GEOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
Bulk organic stable carbon isotope (δ 13 C) and element geochemistry (total organic carbon (TOC) and organic carbon to total nitrogen (C/N)) analysis is a developing technique in Holocene relative sea-level (RSL) research. The uptake of this technique in Northern Europe is limited compared to North America, where the common existence of coastal marshes with isotopically distinctive C 3 and C 4 vegetation associated with well-defined inundation tolerance permits the reconstruction of RSL in the sediment record. In Northern Europe, the reduced range in δ 13 C values between organic matter sources in C 3 estuaries can make the identification of elevation-dependent environments in the Holocene sediment record challenging and this is compounded by the potential for post-depositional alteration in bulk δ 13 C values. The use of contemporary regional δ 13 C, C/N and TOC datasets representing the range of physiographic conditions commonly encountered in coastal wetland sediment sequences opens up the potential of using absolute values of sediment geochemistry to infer depositional environments and associated reference water levels. In this paper, the application of contemporary bulk organic δ 13 C, C/N and TOC to reconstruct Holocene RSL is further explored. An extended contemporary regional geochemical dataset of published δ 13 C, C/N and TOC observations ( n = 142) from tidal-dominated C 3 wetland deposits (representing tidal flat, saltmarsh, reedswamp and fen carr environments) in temperate NW Europe is compiled, and procedures implemented to correct for the 13 C Suess effect on contemporary δ 13 C are detailed. Partitioning around medoids analysis identifies two distinctive geochemical groups in the NW European dataset, with tidal flat/saltmarsh and reedswamp/fen carr environments exhibiting characteristically different sediment δ 13 C, C/N and TOC values. A logistic regression model is developed from the NW European dataset in order to objectively identify in the sediment record geochemical groups and, more importantly, group transitions, thus allowing the altitude of reference water levels to be determined. The application of this method in RSL research is demonstrated using the Holocene sediments of the Mersey Estuary (UK), in which δ 13 C, C/N and TOC variability is typical of that encountered in Holocene sediments from C 3 coastal wetlands in NW Europe. Group membership was predicted with high probability in the depositional contexts studied and the accuracy of group prediction is verified by microfossil evidence. The method presented facilitates the application of δ 13 C, C/N and TOC analysis in RSL reconstruction studies in C 3 vegetated wetlands throughout temperate NW Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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10. Geochemistry of sediments of the Holocene transgressive sequences of the Kara Sea.
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Syromyatnikov, K., Levitan, M., Kuzmina, T., Toropchenova, E., and Zhilkina, A.
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SEDIMENTS , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *GLACIAL melting , *RUNOFF - Abstract
Holocene sequences of the Russian Arctic shelf seas are controlled by a combination of three main factors: deglaciation of the Late Pleistocene Barents-Kara ice sheet, global sea-level rise, and river runoff from Eurasia. Sedimentation in the Kara Sea is mainly defined by two latter factors. The lithological, grainsize, mineralogical, and micropaleontological compositions of the Holocene sequences of this basin have been widely studied, but only a few works report geochemical data. This paper considers comprehensive geochemical data on two cores from the Yenisei transect obtained during cruise of the R/V Akademik Petrov in 2000. Both the cores were dated by radiocarbon accelerator mass spectrometric method (AMS C) and analyzed using XRF and ICP MS methods. The study revealed and described differences in their chemical composition, which are caused by different facies settings of accumulation, their grain size composition, and influence of river run-off. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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11. Holocene East Asian winter monsoon changes reconstructed by sensitive grain size of sediments from Chinese coastal seas: A review.
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Tu, Luyao, Zhou, Xin, Cheng, Wenhan, Liu, Xiaoyan, Yang, Wenqing, and Wang, Yuhong
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CLIMATE change , *GRAIN size , *SEDIMENTS , *CLAY minerals , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
While mean grain size of sensitive component in muddy sediments from Chinese coastal seas was widely used as a proxy for reconstruction of the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) strength, many intractable problems still remain concerning the discrepancies in different studies. This paper provides a comprehensive overview of recent researches on the reconstruction of Holocene EAWM strength using sensitive grain size (SGS) in muddy sediments from the Chinese coastal seas. In the present study, 15 time-series of SGS in sediments from six mud areas are included. These records are summarized and compared during the last 8000 years, 3000 years and 150 years, respectively. The results show that trends of SGS time-series are inconsistent at millennial, multi-centennial and decadal time scales. The inconsistencies could be partly caused by age uncertainties and chosen SGSs. More important, grain size characteristics in sediments from some mud areas could be influenced by factors other than coastal currents driven by EAWM, such as sedimentary environments, riverine runoff and storms. Thus SGS of muddy sediments should be used with caution when reconstructing winter monsoon strength, especially those in the northern Yellow Sea and near the Yangtze River estuary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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12. Charophytes, indicateurs de paléobathymétrie du lac Tigalmamine (Moyen Atlas, Maroc)
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Soulié-Märsche, Ingeborg, Benkaddour, Abdelfattah, Khiati, Najat El, Gemayel, Pierrette, and Ramdani, Mohammed
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CHAROPHYTA , *SEDIMENTS , *CHARACEAE - Abstract
Abstract: A paleolimnological study can be particularly accurate in situations where the species found in the sediments have persisted in the same lake and can provide a direct modern analogue for interpretation. Lake Tigalmamine, thus, represents an exceptionally favourable context, compared to most paleolakes in North Africa, as this site allows comparing the fossil remains of the Characeae to those produced by the living plants. Tigalmamine is a hydrosystem composed of three karstic lakes located at 1626m above sea level in the Middle Atlas of Morocco. The site had been the subject of a 16m long core taken in the center of the central lake under 16m of water (core C 86 in Lamb and Kaars, 1995 [The Holocene 5 (1995) 400–408]). The section represents the total of the Holocene from 10,200 BP to Present (El Hamouti et al., 1991 [Comptes Rendus de l’Académie des Sciences de Paris 2 (1991) 259–265]; Lamb et al., 1995 [Nature 373 (1995) 134–137]). The latter published a synthesis of the pluridisciplinary studies conducted on this core. Also, the numerous gyrogonites isolated from that core had been determined as Chara hispida (Soulié-Märsche in Benkaddour, 1993 [Changements hydrologiques et climatiques dans le Moyen-Atlas marocain : chronologie, minéralogie, géochimie isotopique et élémentaire des sédiments lacustres de Tigalmamine. PhD thesis, Université Paris-Sud, Orsay (inédit)]). Further fieldwork at Tigalmamine by the authors of the present paper in year 2000 showed that Chara hispida is still present in the lake where it forms a belt of submerged vegetation restricted to the range of 2 to 9m water depth. This paper describes the morphological and ecological characteristics of the extant Chara hispida as a reference for the interpretation of the fossil remains. Based on these data, the frequency changes of the gyrogonites in the core sediments become significant in terms of bathymetry. The detailed analysis of the charophytes from the core, as a complement to the previous studies, confirms the existence of four Holocene phases with lake level low stand at Tigalmamine. The aim of the present study is to enhance the value of the charophytes as a useful complementary tool for paleolimnological reconstruction. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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13. A Holocene East Asian winter monsoon record at the southern edge of the Gobi Desert and its comparison with a transient simulation.
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Li, Yu and Morrill, Carrie
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *MADDEN-Julian oscillation , *MONSOONS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) exhibits significant variability on intraseasonal, interannual, and interdecadal time scales and the variability can be extended to Holocene centennial and millennial scales. Previous Holocene EAWM proxy data records, which were mostly located in Central, Eastern and Southern China, did not show a consistent Holocene EAWM history. Therefore, it is difficult to provide insights into mechanisms of the long-term winter monsoon variability on the basis of the records. Eolian sediments at the southern edge of the Gobi Desert, Western China, are sensitive to the EAWM changes and less affected by the East Asian summer monsoon due to an obstruction of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. This paper presents a comparison between a well-dated Holocene EAWM record and coupled climate model simulations, so as to explore physical processes and influencing factors of the Holocene EAWM. Sediment samples from two Holocene eolian sedimentary sections [Huangyanghe (a) and Huangyanghe (b)] were acquired at the southern edge of the Gobi Desert. Chronologies were established based on twenty bulk organic matter AMS C ages and five pollen concentrates AMS C ages. Proxy data, including grain-size, total organic carbon, magnetic susceptibility and carbonate content were obtained from the two eolian sections. The grain-size standard deviation model was applied to determine components sensitive to variability of the Holocene EAWM. After a comparison of environmentally-sensitive grain-size components and proxy data, the 20-200 μm component at the Huangyanghe (a) and the 20-159 μm component at the Huangyanghe (b) section were selected as indicators of the Holocene EAWM, which show a strong early Holocene winter monsoon and a decline of the winter monsoon since the mid-Holocene. We also present equilibrium and transient simulations of the climate evolution for the Holocene using a state-of-art coupled climate model: the Community Climate System Model version 3 (CCSM3). Indices for the Holocene EAWM were calculated and are consistent with the reconstructed Holocene EAWM intensity. The simulations indicate that orbital forcing effects on the land-sea temperature and sea level pressure contrast can account for the observed EAWM trends. Other forcings that were present in the early Holocene, including the remnant Laurentide ice sheet and meltwater forcing in the North Atlantic, were not responsible for the Holocene trends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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14. Raw Material and Technological Changes in Ceramic Productions at Sai Island, Northern Sudan, from the Seventh to the Third Millennium BC.
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D'Ercole, G., Eramo, G., Garcea, E. A. A., Muntoni, I. M., and Smith, J. R.
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RAW materials , *THIRD millennium , *MINERALOGY , *SEDIMENTS , *AFRICAN pottery , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
This study presents the results of integrated mineralogical, petrographic and chemical analyses of different ceramic assemblages and local sediments from Sai Island, northern Sudan, dating to between the seventh and the third millennium bc, and highlights a significant variability in the raw materials and technology of these productions. Although archaeometric analyses of ceramics are widely employed in many parts of the world, a lamentable scientific gap exists for African pottery, which this paper aims to bridge with new and compelling results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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15. Efficiency of frost-cracking processes through space and time: An example from the eastern Italian Alps.
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Savi, S., Delunel, R., and Schlunegger, F.
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CRACKING process (Petroleum industry) , *SPACETIME , *CLIMATE change , *SEDIMENTS , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
It is widely accepted that climate has a strong impact and exerts important feedbacks on erosional processes and sediment transport mechanisms. However, the extent at which climate influences erosion is still a matter of debate. In this paper we test whether frost-cracking processes and related temperature variations can influence the sediment production and surface erosion in a small catchment situated in the eastern Italian Alps. To this extent, we first present a geomorphic map of the region that we complement with published 10 Be-based denudation rates. We then apply a preexisting heat-flow model in order to analyze the variations of the frost-cracking intensity (FCI) in the study area, which could have controlled the sediment production in the basin. Finally, we compare the model results with the pattern of denudation rates and Quaternary deposits in the geomorphic map. The model results, combined with field observations, mapping, and quantitative geomorphic analyses, reveal that frost-cracking processes have had a primary role in the production of sediment where the intensity of sediment supply has been dictated and limited by the combined effect of temperature variations and conditions of bedrock preservation. These results highlight the importance of a yet poorly understood process for the production of sediment in mountain areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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16. A simple approach to define Holocene sequence stratigraphy using borehole and cone penetration test data.
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Styllas, Michael and Eyles, Nick
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *STRATIGRAPHIC geology , *BOREHOLES , *CONE penetration tests , *GEOTECHNICAL engineering , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Cone penetration testing has been widely used since the 1950s for determining the subsurface geotechnical conditions of unconsolidated sediments. This paper highlights the potential value of cone penetration testing as an aid to define the stratigraphic structure of Holocene sedimentary deposits. By calibrating cone penetration test logs with adjacent borehole logs and by utilizing all the available information produced during geotechnical surveying, stratigraphic models that accurately describe the vertical and lateral boundaries, as well as the stacking pattern, of Late Quaternary systems can be constructed. The widespread application and technical simplicity of cone penetration testing, combined with simple data interpretation via correlation with adjacent borehole logs, yield a useful and inexpensive tool for sedimentological investigations. This methodology is illustrated using data from 36 cone penetration tests and 11 boreholes on the Holocene deltaic plain of the Aliakmon River, Greece. Sedimentological and stratigraphic information from core log correlations, the spatial distribution of cone penetration test parameters, sediment grain size and per cent concentration of organic matter are utilized. The results suggest, that in sequence stratigraphic terms, the delta is divided into a lowstand systems tract composed by fluvial gravels and sands (U0) of Late Pleistocene age, as well as from red oxidized clays, and a transgressive systems tract represented by fluvial channel sands (U1), overlain by a thin transgressive sand sheet of coastal origin (U2), characterized by fining upward trends. The highstand systems tract is constituted by a variety of stratigraphic units (U3 to U7) and depositional environments, characterized by coarsening upward sequences, representing both aggradational and progradational facies, and dominated by the presence of three prograding wedges. Detailed definition of the thickness, vertical boundaries and stacking pattern of the resolved stratigraphic units, presented as a two-dimensional stratigraphic model, demonstrates the applicability of the proposed method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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17. Holocene centennial-scale changes of the Indonesian and South China Sea throughflows: Evidences from the Makassar Strait.
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Fan, Weijia, Jian, Zhimin, Bassinot, Franck, and Chu, Zhihui
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HOLOCENE Epoch , *OSCILLATIONS , *THERMOCLINES (Oceanography) , *WATER supply , *FLUID dynamics , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The Indonesian throughflow (ITF), as one of the key links of the global thermohaline circulation in the tropics, influences the large-scale redistribution of ocean heat and freshwater between the Pacific and the Indian Oceans. The ITF interacts with the low-salinity South China Sea throughflow (SCSTF) in the Makassar Strait at the pace of El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). In this paper, variation of the throughflows via the Makassar Strait over the past 12ka is reconstructed according to the seawater δ18Osw differences (indicating salinity gradients), which were determined based on paired measurements of δ18O and magnesium/calcium ratio (Mg/Ca) of Globigerinoides ruber obtained from two sediment cores from the northern and the southern ends of the Makassar Strait respectively. Furthermore, thermal structure variation of the upper water column in the upstream ITF is retrieved on the basis of the temperature difference between the sea surface (G. ruber) and the thermocline (Mg/Ca of Pulleniatina obliquiloculata). It is shown that the surface ITF might have become stronger during the intervals 0.6–1.2, 3–3.6 and 7.2–8ka BP. It also turns out that the SCSTF/ITF system and the upper ocean thermal structure co-vary with each other, and are likely linked with ENSO-like variation of the tropical Pacific. During El Niño-like periods, such as 1.2–3, 3.8–4.6, 5.2–7, and 8–9.6ka BP, the depth of thermocline in the Celebes Sea shoaled and the transport of SCSTF was enhanced, meanwhile the surface warm water transport of the ITF was reduced. An opposite evolution was reconstructed during La Niña-like periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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18. Paleosecular variations refining the chronology of the sediments from the Pearl River Delta, southern China.
- Author
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Yang, Xiaoqiang, Yang, Jie, Su, Zhihua, Huang, Wenya, and Wang, Jianhua
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *CHRONOLOGY , *GEOMAGNETIC secular variation , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *CARBON isotopes - Abstract
A high-resolution paleosecular variations record since ~6 kyr, including direction and relative intensity, was derived from the Pearl River delta (PRD) sediments in southern China constrained by the radiocarbon ages in this paper. The comparison of both direction and relative intensity with other adjacent records confirmed that the non-dipole field has common fluctuations in the centennial to millennial timescales. This pattern provides some profound tied points to correlate the sediment sequence in the different deposition environments. The significant age offsets of the similar secular variation features between the different records corroborate the radiocarbon errors in dating the sediments. This work further showed that the geomagnetic secular variations can serve as an effective tool to determine the sediments’ age and correlate the stratigraphy for the different deposition environments in a wide region. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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19. Sea-level rise and sediment budget controlling the evolution of a transgressive barrier in southern Brazil
- Author
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Lima, L.G., Dillenburg, S.R., Medeanic, S., Barboza, E.G., Rosa, M.L.C.C., Tomazelli, L.J., Dehnhardt, B.A., and Caron, F.
- Subjects
- *
ABSOLUTE sea level change , *SEDIMENTS , *HOLOCENE paleogeography , *GROUND penetrating radar , *DRILL cores - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents an evolutionary model for a coastal barrier in the southernmost coastal sector of Brazil during the Holocene. The dataset is based on 15–20 m drill cores and ground-penetrating radar (GPR) records. The model barrier evolution has two main steps. The first step is the transgression of the barrier controlled by sea-level rise during the Postglacial Marine Transgression, which ended at approximately 6–5 cal ka. Radiocarbon dating indicates that the coastal plain began to be flooded by lagoonal waters between ∼10 and 6.7 cal ka. The second step comprises a barrier transgression controlled by a negative sediment budget of the beach system during the last 6–5 cal ka in a period of an overall slow sea-level fall of approximately 2 m. During the second step, the transgressive barrier migrated because of coastal erosion (the negative sediment budget) and the landward transference of sand by wind and lagoonal delta washout. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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20. History of the fossil carp fishes (Teleostei, Cyprinidae) in Ukraine.
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KOVALCHUK, Olexandr M.
- Subjects
- *
CARP fisheries , *FOSSIL osteichthyes , *FOSSIL cyprinidae , *SEDIMENTS , *ANIMAL species , *ANIMAL classification , *ZOOLOGICAL research - Abstract
This paper presents the checklist of fossil cyprinids discovered on the territory of Ukraine. The purpose of the study was to summarize all literature and field palaeoichthyological data from 36 heterochronous Ukrainian localities. The investigated material originated from the Late Miocene, Pliocene, Pleistocene and Holocene sediments. Nearly 34 carp fish species in 18 genera are listed here. The list shows the main palaeohydrological changes in Ukraine of the last 9 Ma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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21. A synthesis and review of the geological evidence for palaeotsunamis along the coast of southeast Australia: The evidence, issues and potential ways forward
- Author
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Courtney, Claire, Dominey-Howes, Dale, Goff, James, Chagué-Goff, Catherine, Switzer, Adam D., and McFadgen, Bruce
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- *
TSUNAMIS , *PALEOLITHIC Period , *COASTS , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *TSUNAMI hazard zones , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
Abstract: In recent years the role of extreme events such as tsunamis and storms in shaping coastal evolution and change has been increasingly appreciated. Around the world, tsunami geologists are increasingly recognising the signatures of palaeotsunamis almost everywhere they look and in many cases, base their interpretations on similar evidence for Quaternary tsunamis first identified in Australia. Geological research suggests that the coast of south east Australia and others worldwide may have been impacted by palaeotsunamis many times larger than the catastrophic 2004 Indian Ocean and 2011 Tōhoku events. In Australia, the debate centres on the hypothesis that the coast of south east Australia preserves evidence for repeated, large magnitude Quaternary tsunamis. If independently validated, this hypothesis has profound implications for risk. Despite the potential importance of this hypothesis, no synthesis or comprehensive review of the proposed geological evidence and chronology exists. As a result it is difficult to assess the evidence and to draw conclusions about the nature of the hazard and risk along the coast. This synthesis details the spatial distribution of reported palaeotsunami deposits along the coast of New South Wales, south east Australia and summarises the distribution of different types of sedimentary and erosional evidence. The age range of reported palaeotsunami deposits is identified and mapped before discussing ‘same age’ (chronologically correlated) deposits. These data are then used to draw broad conclusions about the evidence and identify future research questions to aid in the testing of the hypothesis for repeated tsunami inundation. We show that 60 sites are purported to contain evidence of tsunami inundation over 650 km of the south east Australian coast with a spatial concentration south of Sydney. Geomorphic evidence, distinctly different to that used elsewhere in global palaeotsunami studies, is reported at 54 sites, with erosional features described as the most frequent indication of inundation. Proposed tsunami deposits are evident at 44 sites, with the dominant deposit type being imbricated boulder stacks. Radiocarbon dating at 39 of the sites led to a proposition of nine events during the Quaternary, eight of which occurred during the Holocene. Interestingly, 18 sites have no chronological data associated with them. Alternative interpretations are offered at six type field sites purported to contain palaeotsunami evidence. Attention is drawn to the disjunct between historical and geological scales of tsunami inundation in the region in addition to the contrast between the scale of reported palaeotsunamis and the robust evidence of smaller events. A synthesis of research into the nature of the evidence is offered, including critiques of evidence type and mechanisms. A critical review of the chronological data is also presented, in addition to the recalibration and analysis of published radiocarbon data. The paper concludes with an outline of research questions for further work on proposed palaeotsunami sites in Australia as well as a statement about likely risk in south east Australia. It also advocates the need for caution when interpreting evidence for palaeotsunamis elsewhere around the world when those interpretations are based on signatures originally reported in south east Australia. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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22. Estuarine Foraminifera from the Gulf of Cambay.
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Ghosh, Anupam
- Subjects
- *
FORAMINIFERA , *MARSHES , *ANIMAL species , *ESTUARIES , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
A low diversity, epifaunal to infaunal Foraminiferal assemblage widely distributed in sand flats, mud flats and marshes along the coastal tracts of the Gulf of Cambay. It is dominated by the species of Ammonia, Rotalidium, Murrayinella, Haynesina, Quinqueloculina, Nonionella, Florilus, Elphidium, Trochammina and Miliammina. A triserial planktonic foraminifer Gallitellia vivans, an indicator of stressed and upwelling areas, is also characteristically present in the sediments of the estuaries. The paper discusses the systematics and distribution of the Foraminiferal species in the macrotidal estuaries of the Gulf of Cambay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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23. Regional to local environmental changes in southern Western Siberia: Evidence from biotic records of mid to late Holocene sediments of Lake Beloye
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Krivonogov, Sergey K., Takahara, Hikaru, Yamamuro, Masumi, Preis, Yulia I., Khazina, Irina V., Khazin, Leonid B., Kuzmin, Yaroslav V., Safonova, Inna Y., and Ignatova, Natalia V.
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTS , *PALEONTOLOGY , *POLLEN , *DIATOMS , *FOSSIL ostracoda - Abstract
Abstract: The paper presents the first paleontological data (pollen, plant macrofossil, diatom and ostracod) on the sediments of Lake Beloye, which is situated in the forest-steppe zone of Western Siberia. Our study contributes to better understanding of the Middle–Late Holocene regional to local environmental changes. Regionally, we recognized a cold stage of 3.4–2.3 calibrated ka BP and a dry stage of 2.8–1.7ka BP. The dry stage coincides with the climate-driven lowered level of the lake at 2.6–1.5ka BP. Later, the climate changed to warmer and wetter, which resulted in a highest stand of the lake at 1.3–0.2ka BP and was followed by the lowering of the lake. Forest-steppe persisted in this area during the whole period under consideration, but probably shifted southward. Such a shift is reflected in the environment around Lake Beloye similar to that of modern taiga, which existed at 3.2–1.3ka BP, however, compared to the colder and wetter climate of taiga, the conditions were colder and drier. The local plant associations and the lake ecosystem were affected by those events of climate and lake level changes. The initial eutrophic sedge-reed swamp evolved to the oligo-mesotrophic sphagnum bog, which existed around the lake at 3.2–1.3ka BP. Later, the bogging process was interrupted by the lake transgression, after which the dried bog around the lake was occupied by the birch forest. The lake ecosystem was strongly affected by the 3.4ka BP climate change: the low-alkaline eutrophic lake with abundant water higher plants and diatoms changed to the alkaline oligotrophic lake with calcium-fixing macrophytic algae and angiosperms. This resulted in total change of lake''s bio-geochemical and sedimentation patterns. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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24. Stratigraphy and chronology of offshore to nearshore deposits associated with the Provo shoreline, Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, Utah
- Author
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Godsey, Holly S., Oviatt, Charles G., Miller, David M., and Chan, Marjorie A.
- Subjects
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LAKES , *CARBON isotopes , *CHRONOLOGY , *CLIMATE change , *PLEISTOCENE stratigraphic geology , *SHORELINES , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Abstract: Stratigraphic descriptions and radiocarbon data from eleven field locations are presented in this paper to establish a chronostratigraphic framework for offshore to nearshore deposits of Lake Bonneville. Based on key marker beds and geomorphic position, the deposits are interpreted to have accumulated during the period from the late transgressive phase, through the overflowing phase, into the regressive phase of the lake. Radiocarbon ages of sediments associated with the Provo shoreline indicate that Lake Bonneville dropped rapidly from the Provo shoreline at about 12,600 14C yr BP (15,000 cal yr B.P.). The presence of one or more sand beds in the upper part of the Provo-aged marl indicates rapid lowering of lake level or storm events at the end of the Provo episode. An accurate understanding of the timing and nature of Lake Bonneville''s climate-driven regression from the Provo shoreline is critical to correlations with records of regional and hemispheric climate change. The rapid descent of the lake from the Provo shoreline correlates with the decline of Lakes Lahontan and Estancia, and with the onset of the BØlling–AllerØd warming event. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
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25. DUST -- A GEOLOGY-ORIENTATED ATTEMPT TO REAPPRAISE THE NATURAL COMPONENTS, AMOUNTS, INPUTS TO SEDIMEN AND IMPORTANCE FOR CORRELATION PURPOSES.
- Author
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HLADIL, Jindrich, CEJCHAN, Petr, BABEK, Ondrej, KOPTIKOVA, Leona, NAVRATIL, Tomas, and KUBINOVA, Petra
- Subjects
- *
DUST , *PARTICULATE matter , *SEDIMENTS , *IRON , *LIMESTONE - Abstract
The paper deals with the recent and present-day natural components of the dust inputs to sediments, and aims to attract the attention of geologists to atmospherically mediated teleconnections among basins across the globe. Similar components as today can also be expected to exist in the pre-human history of the Earth, with capability to affect the quantity and quality of non-carbonate phases in limestones. However, a significant part of atmospheric dust sedimentation is not sufficiently covered by standard measurements. Owing to air quality regulations, most of the present research is conducted to understand the emissions and atmospheric load of PM10, and a lesser number of studies map the possible transport of coarser natural particulate matter over the large distances. With respect to the studied particle sizes and methods of their determination, the present-day aerosol science and geological approach, focused on measured sedimentation or input to sediment, show practically no overlap. We report the first evidence (or at least a well-reasoned hypothesis) that the low numbers of frequently occurring large particles, e.g. with 50-µm de or larger, must always represent a substantial mass added to mineral dust budgets. These rare and bulky particles are either transported with the super-storm dust plumes in the troposphere, or with the jet streams near the tropopause. From the geological point of view, it is important to consider all sizes of mineral-lithic particles or grains, particularly from the silt to fine-sand sizes (i.e., 4-250 µm). In atmospheric physics, only the total suspended particulates (TSP) are a partial and often unreliable counterpart. This subject is especially worth of exploring although the emerging discipline, combining the estimates of the total burden of atmosphere by every classes of the natural solid particles and their measurable 'final sedimentary inputs', is still encumbered with much imprecision, and the reported results are more concerned with the principles and rough estimates than all variants of calculations. Classifying the components by their sources, this attempt suggests that the ideal mean airborne inputs to the sediments on the present-day Earth are approximately as follows (g/m²/yr): terrestrial weathering ≈ 3.3; volcanic ash ≈ 0.3; biotic ≈ 0.5; cosmogenic ≈ 0.0002; wildfires ≈ 0.3; solids with ultra fine secondary aerosols ≈ 0.02. giving a total of ≈ 4.4. Therefore, a mean (ideal) input of the natural dust to the present (and possibly also Holocene) sediments of about 4-5 g/m²/yr should be considered. Naturally, the real inputs vary geographically to a large extent (± a few orders of magnitude). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
26. Site formation processes in caves: The Holocene sediments of the Haua Fteah, Cyrenaica, Libya
- Author
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Hunt, Chris, Davison, John, Inglis, Robyn, Farr, Lucy, Reynolds, Tim, Simpson, David, el-Rishi, Hwedi, and Barker, Graeme
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE paleoclimatology , *CAVES , *SEDIMENTS , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *RADIOCARBON dating , *FACIES - Abstract
Abstract: Caves have yielded some of the most globally important archaeological sequences, but often their interpretation has suffered from assumptions about cave sedimentary processes. Caves contain distinctive sedimentary environments: this has major implications for the understanding of contained archaeological materials. This paper describes and analyses the Holocene sediments in the Haua Fteah, a sequence regarded as essentially continuous by the original excavator. 50 years after it was first excavated, the Haua''s Epipalaeolithic to post-Classical chronological range and rich finds make it still the key Holocene archaeological site in North Africa. The reassessment shows, however, that the sequence is strongly discontinuous and this has major implications for the reinterpretation of the site, as the highly-resolved archaeological record is thus likely to reflect a series of brief occupations, rather than continuous human activity. As with many caves, the sedimentary record in the Haua Fteah is an extremely sensitive indicator of environments and processes in the wider landscape. Secure understanding of sedimentary process, from analysis of the highly individual records found in caves, is essential for full understanding of their contained archaeology. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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27. Fluvial sediments, correlations and palaeoenvironmental reconstruction: The development of robust radiocarbon chronologies
- Author
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Howard, Andy J., Gearey, Ben R., Hill, Tom, Fletcher, William, and Marshall, Peter
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *RADIOCARBON dating , *SEDIMENTS , *ALLUVIUM , *CHRONOLOGY , *WATERSHEDS , *TOMOGRAPHY - Abstract
Abstract: Multiple sequences of radiocarbon dates extracted from organic materials are increasingly being used to provide robust chronologies for landscape development, particularly the timing and correlation of significant climatic and ‘process’ events. Whilst the validity of using such frameworks in sedimentary environments such as lake basins and raised bogs has been the focus of much attention, such debates have not extended to fluvial systems. Using examples from three lowland, vertically accreting river valleys in East Anglia, UK, this paper assesses the robustness of their associated radiocarbon chronologies by assessing the contrasting age estimates that are obtained by dating different parts of the same organic sample (humic, humin and plant macrofossils) at a variety of stratigraphic levels. Overall, the humin and humic acid fraction results were statistically consistent, whilst the plant macrofossil remains were found to be of a slightly younger age. In these examples, it is argued that the younger ages appear to be the result of Phragmites (common reed) roots pushing plant macrossils through the sedimentary sequence or opening up voids for material to fall through, although studies in lacustrine and mire environments suggest alternative explanations may also be possible. Whichever explanation is preferred, this study demonstrates clearly that the complexity of valley floor stratigraphy and processes is such, that using single radiocarbon dates, whether AMS or bulk samples to reconstruct chronologies of ‘geomorphic system response’ may need to be refined and subjected to the same level of assessment that has been applied in other sedimentary systems. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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28. TAXONOMY OF QUATERNARY DEEP-SEA OSTRACODS FROM THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN.
- Author
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YASUHARA, MORIAKI, OKAHASHI, HISAYO, and CRONIN, THOMAS M.
- Subjects
- *
OSTRACODA , *ANIMAL species , *SEDIMENTS , *CLIMATE change , *TAXONOMY - Abstract
Late Quaternary sediments from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Hole 1055B, Carolina Slope, western North Atlantic (32°47.041′ N, 76°17.179′ W; 1798 m water depth) were examined for deep-sea ostracod taxonomy. A total of 13 933 specimens were picked from 207 samples and c. 120 species were identified. Among them, 87 species were included and illustrated in this paper. Twenty-eight new species are described. The new species are: Ambocythere sturgio, Argilloecia abba, Argilloecia caju, Argilloecia keigwini, Argilloecia robinwhatleyi, Aversovalva carolinensis, Bythoceratina willemvandenboldi, Bythocythere eugeneschornikovi, Chejudocythere tenuis, Cytheropteron aielloi, Cytheropteron demenocali, Cytheropteron didieae, Cytheropteron richarddinglei, Cytheropteron fugu, Cytheropteron guerneti, Cytheropteron richardbensoni, Eucytherura hazeli, Eucytherura mayressi, Eucytherura namericana, Eucytherura spinicorona, Posacythere hunti, Paracytherois bondi, Pedicythere atroposopetasi, Pedicythere kennettopetasi, Pedicythere klothopetasi, Pedicythere lachesisopetasi, Ruggieriella mcmanusi and Xestoleberis oppoae. Taxonomic revisions of several common species were made to reduce taxonomic uncertainty in the literature. This study provides a robust taxonomic baseline for application to palaeoceanographical reconstruction and biodiversity analyses in the deep and intermediate-depth environments of the North Atlantic Ocean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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29. CAT-scan analysis of sedimentary sequences: An ultrahigh-resolution paleoclimatic tool
- Author
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St-Onge, Guillaume and Long, Bernard F.
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *CLIMATE change research , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *NUMERICAL analysis , *MATHEMATICAL models , *TOMOGRAPHY , *HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology - Abstract
Abstract: Paleoclimate research is essential to determine the natural variability of climate and to place the current climate change into its natural context. The current need is to generate the highest temporal resolution paleoclimatic reconstructions possible in order to assess the natural variability of the climate system, but also to test the ability of numerical models to simulate conditions different from the ones observed with the relatively short instrumental records. In this paper, we show that CAT-scan analysis of sedimentary sequences, with its 1 mm downcore resolution, can be used to identify millennial to seasonal cycles in sedimentary sequences. In examples from the St. Lawrence Estuary, Eastern Canada, spectral analysis of the CAT-scan data from Holocene postglacial sediments revealed millennial- to centennial-scale oscillations possibly associated with either solar variability, changes in relative sea-level or tidal amplitude. Similarly, spectral analysis of Holocene and Sangamonian glaciomarine sequences revealed decadal- to annual-scale oscillations with periods close to the one previously associated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), whereas spectral analysis of the CAT-scan data from the Sangamonian rhythmites possibly revealed seasonal cycles. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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30. TOO OLD AMS RADIOCARBON DATES OBTAINED FROM MOSS REMAINS FROM LAKE KWIECKO BOTTOM SEDIMENTS (N POLAND).
- Author
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Madeja, Jacek and Latowski, Dariusz
- Subjects
- *
CARBON isotopes , *PALYNOLOGY , *LAKES , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
The paper presents the results of the AMS radiocarbon dating of moss macrofossils which seem to be too old in the context of palynological data. The lack of agreement between the obtained results of radiocarbon dating and pollen analysis has been discussed. Some possible causes of the discrepancies between the results of radiocarbon dating and palynological dating have been given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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31. Provincialism in trends and high frequency changes in the northwest North Atlantic during the Holocene
- Author
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de Vernal, Anne and Hillaire-Marcel, Claude
- Subjects
- *
DINOFLAGELLATE cysts , *SEDIMENTS , *SALINITY , *ISOTOPES - Abstract
Abstract: In the present paper, we report on micropaleontological (dinocysts) and isotopic (18O and 13C in foraminifers) analyses performed in Holocene sediments from fifteen cores raised from the central and northwest North Atlantic. Sea-surface temperature (SST), sea-surface salinity (SSS), thus potential density, and sea-ice cover are reconstructed based on dinocyst assemblages. After proper calibration, oxygen isotope data on the mesopelagic foraminifer Neogloboquadrina pachyderma left coiled (Npl) are converted into potential density values deeper in the water column, thus allowing documentation of vertical density gradients and identification of intervals favourable for winter convection to occur with formation of intermediate Labrador Sea Water (LSW). The most important findings from this study include: (1) the existence of an early-mid Holocene thermal optimum with positive anomalies up to 6 °C above present along the main SW–NE axis of the North Atlantic Current, but no significant SST maximum at most sites along eastern Canadian margins; (2) the evidence for larger than present amplitude of annual SSTs during the early Holocene, thus for a stronger seasonality; (3) minimum sea-ice cover from 11500 to 6000 cal years BP, and a slight increase of sea-ice variability, and average seasonal duration of 0.5 to 1 month per year afterwards; (4) variable SSS during the entire Holocene, suggesting changes in the routing and rates of freshwater–meltwater discharges from the Arctic and eastern Canada; (5) the setting of conditions compatible with LSW production after 8 ka only, and likely a more steady production during the late Holocene; (6) an overall trend for a potential density increase of the Labrador Sea, throughout the Holocene, matching a decreasing trend eastward, thus suggesting a progressive enhancement of the western branch of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning with respect to its northeastern route; and (7) indication of maximum production and fast dispersal of LSW in the entire North Atlantic during recent times only, as suggested by linearly-converging δ 18O-values of Npl from all sites, towards its modern relatively homogeneous composition (∼ 2.5/2.6‰). The overall picture of the Holocene North Atlantic arising from this study is that of a basin marked by a strong regionalism with large discrepancies in hydrographical trends and high frequency oscillations, at least partly controlled by freshwater–meltwater routes and rates of export from the Arctic. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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32. Holocene land-use change and its impact on river basin dynamics in Great Britain and Ireland.
- Author
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Foulds, Simon A. and Macklin, Mark G.
- Subjects
- *
WATERSHEDS , *HOLOCENE paleoclimatology , *CLIMATE change , *LAND use , *SEDIMENTS , *PHYSICAL geography , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
River basins in Great Britain and Ireland have been characterized by periods of hillslope and valley floor instability during the Holocene, reflecting sensitivity to both climate change and anthropogenic disturbance. In contrast to climatic controls, which have been relatively well documented, human impacts on and interactions with river basins remain unclear. There is now, however, a growing impetus to elucidate more fully the impact of anthropogenic activity on sediment supply and runoff, given that land-use change is thought to have exacerbated recent flooding in the UK (eg, the 'Millennium' floods of 2000). The aim of this paper is to critically review the significance of Holocene land use on hillslope and valley floor stability in Great Britain and Ireland. The most widely reported impacts of land-use change on geomorphic activity include hillslope erosion and gully development, valley floor alluviation, river channel incision and elevated water tables. In the majority of cases, however, causal relationships are difficult to establish, due primarily to inadequate dating control. Even where geomorphic instability can be linked to land-use change, it is apparent that eroded material is often stored as colluvium, which together with evidence of diachronus hillslope and valley floor instability, raises important questions and identifies uncertainties regarding the dynamics and extent of sediment transfer within river basins. Such uncertainty has important implications for understanding how river basins will behave in response to future environmental change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Mid- to late-Holocene relative sea-level change in southwest Britain and the influence of sediment compaction.
- Author
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Edwards, Robin J.
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE paleoclimatology , *ABSOLUTE sea level change , *SEDIMENTS , *GEOLOGICAL research , *STRATIGRAPHIC geology , *CARBON isotopes , *WATER levels , *GEOPHYSICS - Abstract
Relative sea-level changes in southwest Britain are poorly constrained because of limitations in the quality and quantity of existing geological data. As a consequence, in contrast to most other regions in the UK, it is not possible to reliably infer rates of land and sea-level change during the last few thousand years. Furthermore, geologically based sea-level reconstructions from this area display significant misfits with relative sea-level predictions based on a recent global model of the glacio-isostatic adjustment process. This paper presents a new record of relative sea-level change for the last 4000 years derived from radiocarbon-dated sea-level index points. In addition to providing information concerning the pattern and rates of late Holocene sea-level change, these data are used to evaluate the suggestion that the apparent misfits between model predictions and geological reconstructions can be satisfactorily explained as a consequence of the lowering of sea-level index points by sediment compaction. The results indicate that a simple, first-order method of decompaction based on the stratigraphic position of sea-level index points, can eliminate much of the misfit between reconstructions and predictions, and substantially reduce vertical scatter in geological data. They also suggest that the influence of compaction on sea-level data from this region may be larger than previously thought. The simple addition of reliable stratigraphic data, in combination with targeted sampling, has the potential to improve our understanding of the compaction process, and increase the utility of existing data. This is increasingly important as the partnership between geophysical modelling and geological investigation becomes more commonplace in sea-level studies around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Holocene palaeoenvironments inferred from a sedimentary sequence in the Tsoaing River Basin, western Lesotho
- Author
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Grab, Stefan, Scott, Louis, Rossouw, Lloyd, and Meyer, Sharon
- Subjects
- *
PALYNOLOGY , *SEDIMENTS , *CARBON - Abstract
Abstract: The paper presents a sedimentological, palynological, and phytolith record from a 13 m deep Holocene sedimentary sequence, located in the Tsoaing River valley, southwestern Lesotho. Six conventional radiocarbon and two AMS dates provide a relatively high resolution Holocene record for the sedimentary sequence, ranging from ca. 12000 to 4000 years BP. Pollen is absent in the upper section but present in the lower 2 m, confirming terminal Pleistocene/Holocene conditions reported in previous published pollen and charcoal records from the region. The absence of pollen in the upper layers of ca. 9000 years BP and younger suggests that conditions over southwestern Lesotho throughout much of the Holocene was typified by a seasonal climate that prevented long-term preservation of plant remains, although other plant material like robust spores, microscopic charcoal, and phytoliths withstood oxidation. Sedimentological and phytolith results suggest that the period from ca. 8600 to 8450 years BP experienced rapid environmental change towards drier conditions. Phases of chemical disintegration with organic input (including local swamp phytoliths) are suggested at ca. 7000 years BP and again after 4500 years BP. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Barrier evolution and placer formation at Bujuru southern Brazil
- Author
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Dillenburg, Sérgio R., Tomazelli, Luiz J., and Barboza, Eduardo G.
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology , *EOLIAN processes , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
This paper demonstrates the link between the evolution of a coastal barrier in southern Brazil during the Late Holocene and the formation of a large volume of eolian disseminated heavy mineral deposits. Our data set is based on an earlier heavy mineral prospecting campaign (1991) and on 10 new shallow vibrocores, 2–5 m long. The model presented has three main steps of barrier evolution. The first step is the recycling of coastal plain deposits during the Postglacial Marine Transgression, which ended at 5.6 ka when heavy minerals were incorporated into beach and washover facies of a transgressive barrier. The second step is the shoreward retreat of the barrier, under a slow and small sea-level fall, during the last 5.6 ka. This second step eroded and recycled sediments from the Pleistocene substrate, which acted as an extra source of heavy minerals. Heavy minerals were concentrated in backshore deposits by wave action during barrier recession. The third step is the erosion and transport of backshore sands by onshore winds into an inter-barrier depression in the form of transgressive dune deposits. These deposits contain an average of 4.66±1.02% disseminated heavy minerals (1494 samples). This eolian placer deposit has started to form 1 ka ago and is still under formation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Holocene to modern fine-grained sedimentation on a macrotidal shoreface-to-inner-shelf setting (eastern Bay of the Seine, France)
- Author
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Garnaud, Sébastien, Lesueur, Patrick, Clet, Martine, Lesourd, Sandric, Garlan, Thierry, Lafite, Robert, and Brun-Cottan, Jean-Claude
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology , *PALYNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents the results of an investigation on different timescales of the main mechanisms governing fine-grained sedimentation on a macrotidal sandy shoreface-to-inner-shelf setting with a supply of terrigenous sediment: the subtidal area of the southeastern Bay of the Seine (Calvados coast, France). Interpretation and calibration of side-scan sonar imagery clearly shows that compact clays crop out in water depths of 3–6 m. Radiocarbon dating and palynological studies of the material sampled using long cores from this subtidal area show that these relict sediments constitute the infilling of lateral valleys of the palaeo-Seine during the last 10 000 years. The lower parts of these deposits consist of compact clays that accumulated in a floodplain setting, later a salt marsh environment, and are succeeded by sediment with sand/mud couplets which formed in a tidal/estuarine system. The top of this sequence has been truncated by a wave erosion surface formed during the Holocene transgression. Today, the sediment accumulating is composed of fine sand, mixed with fine-grained sediment and sometimes temporarily covered by fresh mud. The more recent sedimentological data, compared with surveys in the 1960s–1970s, demonstrate both an increase in the erosion of the submerged earlier Holocene clays and an increase in the mud (silt+clay) content of the superficial sediments. On a seasonal timescale, the seafloor is affected by high-frequency variations in the nature of the contemporary sedimentary cover. Spatial and temporal observations of the seafloor composition have been undertaken during different seasons for four years (1998–2001) to study these sedimentation events. The sedimentation on the inner-shelf is at its maximum when veneers of fresh mud occur after some particular hydrological periods, i.e. sustained high-river outputs following several dry years (i.e. prolonged weak river flows), when significant volumes of mud have been stored within the Seine estuary. Such mud veneers result from: (1) the direct supply of river-born material, (2) the seaward shifting of the turbidity maximum, and (3) the resuspension of mud from the lower estuary (i.e. fluid mud and intertidal flats) under wind-waves, and have been termed ‘estuarine flood deposits’. On a longer timescale of at least the last decades, the southeastern Bay of the Seine is an area of erosion, but it is subjected to ephemeral fine-grained sedimentation on a seasonal timescale. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Sources and paleoclimatic significance of Holocene Bignell Loess, central Great Plains, USA
- Author
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Mason, Joseph A., Jacobs, Peter M., Hanson, Paul R., Miao, Xiaodong, and Goble, Ronald J.
- Subjects
- *
PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *HOLOCENE stratigraphic geology , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
This paper reexamines the stratigraphy, sources, and paleoclimatic significance of Holocene Bignell Loess in the central Great Plains. A broadly similar sequence of loess depositional units and paleosols was observed in thick Bignell Loess sections up to 300 km apart, suggesting that these sections record major regional changes in the balance between dust deposition and pedogenesis. New optical ages, together with previously reported radiocarbon ages, indicate Bignell Loess deposition began 9000–11,000 yr ago and continued into the late Holocene; some Bignell Loess is <1000 yr old. There is little evidence that Holocene Loess was derived from flood plain sources, as previously proposed. Instead, thick Bignell Loess occurs mainly near the downwind margins of inactive dune fields, particularly atop escarpments facing the dunes. Thus, the immediate loess source was dust produced when the dunes were active. Previous work indicates that widespread episodes of dune activity are likely to have resulted from drier-than-present climatic conditions. The regionally coherent stratigraphy of Bignell Loess can be interpreted as a near-continuous record of climatically driven variation in dune field activity throughout the Holocene. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Climate and related controls on interglacial fluvial sedimentation in lowland Britain
- Author
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Gibbard, P.L. and Lewin, J.
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *PALEONTOLOGY , *RIVERS - Abstract
Interglacial fluvial sediment sequences are common in lowland Britain where their palaeontology has been considerably studied but their sedimentology is poorly known. By contrast, Holocene (Flandrian) sequences have yielded important insights into river, and thus, environmental evolution. This paper examines the nature of the interglacial fluvial sedimentary record in southern Britain, showing similarities and differences in the sedimentary record. A four-phase pattern of fluvial behaviour through an interglacial cycle is presented. The utility of using Holocene sequences as analogues for previous interglacial sedimentation is discussed and an attempt is made to explain the proposed four-phase pattern in terms of predictable fluvial responses to an interglacial climate cycle. Finally, the implications of the pattern for alluvial unit preservation and the stratigraphical interpretation of Pleistocene temperate events from river sediments are highlighted. It is shown that British lowland rivers normally adopt three major behavioural modes in the Pleistocene: braided or wandering gravel-dominated mode, fine-sediment-dominated stable meandering to anastomosing mode, and incision or non-depositional mode. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Alluvial fan sediments and surface ages resulting from differing climatic and tectonic conditions in Star Valley, Wyoming, USA.
- Author
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Palmquist, Robert C.
- Subjects
- *
ALLUVIAL fans , *LANDSLIDES , *SEDIMENTS , *SOIL profiles , *SURFACE texture , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Alluvial fans occur in all climatic and tectonic environments. However, most descriptions of fan features and sediments have focused on arid and semiarid regions. This paper describes the sediments and soil ages on 63 alluvial fans in a subhumid climate (mean annual precipitation of 45–52 cm). SSURGO soil data were merged with geologic and topographic data in the ArcMap© GIS platform to develop a series of maps showing variations across fan surfaces in sediment textures and surface stability ages. Particle size data (percent cobble and percent total gravel) from the upper 150 cm of sediments cluster into six textural groups that are aligned along a trend of decreasing gravel percentage (decreasing stream capacity) and decreasing cobble percentage (decreasing stream competency). The groups of higher cobble and gravel percentages extend from fan apex to toe in both the shallow (<50 cm depth) and deeper (>100 cm depth) layers with groups of lower cobble and gravel percentage occurring along fan margins in the shallow (<50 cm depth) layer. The thickness of B and Bt horizons from representative soil profiles were used to calculate proportional soil ages based on 10Be residence times in loessial Bt horizons and correlation of gravelly fan soils to similar gravelly soils on nearby Pinedale outwash. This approach identified six stability episodes since the end of the Bull Lake beginning at ~100 ka, ~38 ka, ~27 ka, ~16 ka, ~10 ka, and <2 ka. The proportional soil ages correlate closely with fan chronologies constrained by TL and OSL ages in nearby areas. Soil ages and sediment textural groups differed between fan populations along the mountain front with active faulting and those along the stable mountain front. Fan stability surfaces older than 16 ka are preserved only at fault termini. Holocene faulting resulted in fans with (1) coarser sediments, (2) younger sediments, (3) progressive onlap of younger sediments, (4) the absence of relic fan surfaces, landslides and colluvium at the mountain front, and (5) the onlap of alluvial fans onto the floodplain of the axial stream. Sediment pulses related to individual fault events could not be definitively identified because of concurrent climatic changes. The study demonstrates that both climatic and tectonic conditions influence sediment textures and fan surfaces ages. • Sediments cluster into six groups reflecting progressive changes in stream power • The same high capacity/high competency textural groups dominate all fan sediments • Six fan-surface stability episodes since Bull Lake (100, 38, 27, 16, 10, and < 2 ka) • Relict fans >38 ka only occur at fault termini; elsewhere fan surfaces are <16 ka • Identified fan-stability episodes are regional and correspond to climate changes [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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