145 results on '"Medialdea, Alicia"'
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2. Geology, geomorphology and geochronology of the coseismic? Emad Deh rock avalanche associated with a growing anticline and a rising salt diapir, Zagros Mountains, Iran
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Gutiérrez, Francisco, Deirnik, Hosein, Zarei, Mehdi, and Medialdea, Alicia
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- 2023
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3. “Climatic fluctuations in the hyperarid core of the Atacama Desert during the past 215 ka”
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Ritter, Benedikt, Wennrich, Volker, Medialdea, Alicia, Brill, Dominik, King, Georgina, Schneiderwind, Sascha, Niemann, Karin, Fernández-Galego, Emma, Diederich, Julia, Rolf, Christian, Bao, Roberto, Melles, Martin, and Dunai, Tibor J.
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- 2019
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4. Late Pleistocene–Holocene multi-decadal patterns of extreme floods in NW Iberia: The Duero River palaeoflood record
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Benito, Gerardo, Greenbaum, Noam, Medialdea, Alicia, Calle, Mikel, Sánchez Moya, Yolanda, Machado, María J., Ballesteros Cánovas, Juan Antonio, Corella, Juan Pablo, Benito, Gerardo, Greenbaum, Noam, Medialdea, Alicia, Calle, Mikel, Sánchez Moya, Yolanda, Machado, María J., Ballesteros Cánovas, Juan Antonio, and Corella, Juan Pablo
- Abstract
Extreme floods are anticipated to become more frequent in a future warmer climate. However, the long-term alterations in flood patterns across different regions of Europe remain unclear. In this study, we present a 15,000-year record of extreme floods in the Duero River, located in the southwestern Atlantic region. We analysed slackwater flood sediments, quantified the discharge and timing of individual flood beds over millennial time scales, and identified their potential climate influences. The composite record includes at least 62 floods grouped into ten flood-rich periods (with an average duration of 230 years). A high-frequency phase of moderate-magnitude floods (>10 events) occurred at ∼11.6–11.5 ka, following a period of reduced flood activity during the Younger Dryas. Similar clusters of Early Holocene floods (10.8–10.3 ka, 9.5 ka) coincided with or preceded meltwater pulses from the North Atlantic. The absence of palaeoflood records with discharges exceeding 6100 m3/s during the Mid-Holocene suggests a decline in winter hydro-meteorological extremes. High flood magnitudes were recorded during transition periods toward cooler and wetter conditions at 4.4, 2.3, 0.5, and 0.11 ka with discharges ranging from 7600 to 10,000 m3/s. These periods were interpreted as indicative of a southward shift in cyclone tracks in Europe driven by negative phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Conversely, flood magnitudes decreased during past warmer climate conditions (1.7 ka, 0.9 ka, and the present), although flood frequency remained high. The current decline in flood frequency reflects an increase in flood regulation due to dams, but it is also consistent with the prevailing positive trend in the NAO observed over the last 40 years., Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Dirección General del Agua, Fundación Biodiversidad, Union Europea, Depto. de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Fac. de Ciencias Geológicas, TRUE, pub
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- 2023
5. Tectónica Plio-Cuaternaria en la Bahía de Ocoa (La Española, NE del Caribe)
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Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra y del Medio Ambiente, Fernández, Francisco José, Escuder-Viruete, Javier, Pérez-Valera, Fernando, Valverde-Vaquero, Pablo, Castillo-Carrión, Mercedes, Rubio-Ordóñez, Álvaro, Medialdea, Alicia, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra y del Medio Ambiente, Fernández, Francisco José, Escuder-Viruete, Javier, Pérez-Valera, Fernando, Valverde-Vaquero, Pablo, Castillo-Carrión, Mercedes, Rubio-Ordóñez, Álvaro, and Medialdea, Alicia
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The left-lateral Beata ridge (BR) and the right-lateral Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara (OB) fault zones transfer the Plio-Quaternary deformation that results from the NNE-indentation of the Beata oceanic escarpment under the southern margin of Hispaniola. An arcuate relief bound the Ocoa bay, and the current tectonic uplift accelerates the fluvial incision and modifies the fluvial network. Both are active seismic faults whose respective kilometric traces converge 20 km northeaster ward of Ocoa bay, under the San José de Ocoa basin and potentially might be generated large earthquakes. In detail, strain is accommodated by the brittle partition of the fault zones and segmentation of the main faults into minor faults that bounded kilometric blocks of a lozenge shape, with the development of two significant partitions: the Sabana Buey pull-apart basin and the extensional block southward the Azua area; according to the respective fault topology and the relative fault rate displacement. The avulsion of the Ocoa river by the Sabana Buey basin opening occurred during the late Pleistocene, according to the OSL age of a lower alluvial fan (ca. 16 ky) incised by the current floodplain into the river mouth., Las zonas de fallas de desgarre izquierdo de la cresta de Beata (BR) y derecho de Ocoa-Bonao-La-Guácara (OB) transfieren la deformación Plio-Cuaternaria que produce la indentación NNE del escarpe oceánico de Beata bajo el margen meridional de la Española. La bahía de Ocoa está bordeada por un relieve arqueado, y el levantamiento tectónico actual acelera la incisión fluvial y modifica la red fluvial. Ambas fallas son sísmicamente activas y sus trazas kilométricas convergen 20 km hacia el noreste de la bahía de Ocoa, bajo la cuenca de San José de Ocoa, y potencialmente pueden generar grandes terremotos. En detalle, la deformación está acomodada por la partición frágil de las zonas de falla y la segmentación de las fallas principales en fallas menores que bordean bloques romboidales, con desarrollo de dos importantes particiones: la cuenca de “pull-apart” de Sabana Buey y el bloque extensional del S del área de Azua; de acuerdo con la respectiva topología de la zona de falla y las tasas de desplazamiento relativo. La avulsión del río Ocoa por la apertura de la cuenca de Sabana Buey se produjo en el Pleistoceno superior, de acuerdo con la datación OSL de la base de un abanico aluvial inferior (ca. 16 ka) incidido por la llanura aluvial de inundación actual en la desembocadura del río.
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- 2023
6. Present-Day Caribbean-North American Oblique Convergence Through the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara Fault Zone, Southern Central Hispaniola: A Transition Zone Between Oceanic Subduction and Arc-Oceanic Plateau Collision
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Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra y del Medio Ambiente, Escuder-Viruete, Javier, Fernández, Francisco José, Pérez-Valera, Fernando, Medialdea, Alicia, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra y del Medio Ambiente, Escuder-Viruete, Javier, Fernández, Francisco José, Pérez-Valera, Fernando, and Medialdea, Alicia
- Abstract
According to GPS measurements, the Caribbean plate is moving east-northeastward relative to the North American plate at a rate of ∼20 mm/a. This oblique motion is partly accommodated in southern Hispaniola by northward underthrusting/subduction bellow the Muertos submerged accretionary prism and the Peralta fold-and-thrust belt. This work investigates the active transition zone that connects Muertos and Peralta: the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara fault zone (OBFZ). Combined detailed structural analysis at macroscopic and mesoscopic scales, regional magnetic data and seismicity analysis, geomorphic observations, fault-slip data inversion and geochronology of Quaternary deposits allow to establish the deformation pattern for the OBFZ along southern central Hispaniola. Distinct tectonic regimes have occurred successively in the Neogene, within a consistent regional NE-trending horizontal shortening: (a) a lower Miocene to Early Pleistocene D1 regime characterized by SW-directed thrusting that homogeneously affects the region; and (b) an Early/Middle Pleistocene to Holocene D2 regime of strike-slip to transpressional faulting mainly located along the OBFZ. The change is coeval with the tectonic indentation of the Beata Ridge in the back-arc region of the Hispaniola microplate. Finally, a Late Pleistocene to Holocene D3 extensional regime has a local development around the Ocoa Bay. Part of the present-day stress-field induced by the Beata Ridge collision is accommodated by the OBFZ within the Hispaniola microplate. This fault zone defines the onland transition between oceanic subduction and arc-oceanic plateau collision. Due to its length and potential to generate large earthquakes, the OBFZ must be considered in the regional seismic hazard assessment.
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- 2023
7. Neanderthal Footprints in the “Matalascañas Trampled Surface” (SW Spain): New OSL Dating and Mousterian Lithic Industry
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Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Cristalografía, Mineralogía y Química Agrícola, Junta de Andalucía, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. Portugal, Neto de Carvalho, Carlos, Muñiz Guinea, Fernando, Cáceres, Luis M., Rodríguez Vidal, Joaquín, Medialdea, Alicia, Val, Miren del, Proença Cunha, Pedro, García, Jose María, Giles Guzmán, Francisco, Carrión, José S., Finlayson, Clive, Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Cristalografía, Mineralogía y Química Agrícola, Junta de Andalucía, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. Portugal, Neto de Carvalho, Carlos, Muñiz Guinea, Fernando, Cáceres, Luis M., Rodríguez Vidal, Joaquín, Medialdea, Alicia, Val, Miren del, Proença Cunha, Pedro, García, Jose María, Giles Guzmán, Francisco, Carrión, José S., and Finlayson, Clive
- Abstract
In the Huelva Coast of SW Spain erosion by recent marine storms revealed the presence of a paleosol where an extensive tracksite known as “Matalascañas Trampled Surface” (MTS) has been documented. The MTS includes tracks and trackways of large species of mammals, along with bird trace fossils, invertebrate burrows and root traces. Within this record, the presence of several hominin footprints and trackways stands out. Despite previous uncertainties about the producer of these footprints, new OSL age of 151 ± 11 ka secures their attribution to Neanderthals, the only hominins known to have been present in the Iberian Peninsula during the MIS6-5 transition. Moreover, typical Mousterian lithic industry with Levallois knapping was found associated with the ichnological record. This lithic industry is characterized by the selection of raw materials from outcrops in a short-distance range to the tracksite. The general characteristics of the lithics are derived both from the nature of the raw material and from the nature of the site itself, which cannot be seen as a settlement, but rather as a place of passage for fauna, including Neanderthals, where a few human individuals performed short-term activities, such as food procurement and/or meat processing.
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- 2023
8. Dataset for Present-day accommodation of Caribbean-North American oblique plate convergence through the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara fault zone, southern central Hispaniola: a transition zone between oceanic subduction and arc-oceanic plateau collision
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Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Escuder Viruete, Javier [0000-0002-3108-9082], Escuder Viruete, Javier [j.escuder@igme.es ; javier.escuder@csic.es], Escuder Viruete, Javier, Fernández Rodríguez, Francisco José, Pérez Valera, Fernando, Medialdea, Alicia, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Escuder Viruete, Javier [0000-0002-3108-9082], Escuder Viruete, Javier [j.escuder@igme.es ; javier.escuder@csic.es], Escuder Viruete, Javier, Fernández Rodríguez, Francisco José, Pérez Valera, Fernando, and Medialdea, Alicia
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[EN] This dataset present methodological, seismic, structural and geochronological (optically stimulated luminescence) data collected in southern central Hispaniola Island to better understand the regional process of collision between the Beata Ridge and the back-arc margin of the Caribbean island-arc. In particular, the role played by the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara fault zone (OBGFZ), which is an active, NNE to NE-striking large-scale fault system that crosses the southern central sector of Hispaniola in the Dominican Republic along more than 250 km.
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- 2023
9. Present-day Caribbean-North American oblique convergence through the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara fault zone, southern central Hispaniola: a transition zone between oceanic subduction and arc-oceanic plateau collision
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Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Escuder Viruete, Javier [0000-0002-3108-9082], Escuder Viruete, Javier, Fernández Rodríguez, Francisco José, Pérez Valera, Fernando, Medialdea, Alicia, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Escuder Viruete, Javier [0000-0002-3108-9082], Escuder Viruete, Javier, Fernández Rodríguez, Francisco José, Pérez Valera, Fernando, and Medialdea, Alicia
- Abstract
[EN] According to GPS measurements, the Caribbean plate is moving east-northeastward relative to the North American plate at a rate of ~20 mm/a. This oblique motion is partly accommodated in southern Hispaniola by northward underthrusting/subduction bellow the Muertos submerged accretionary prism and the Peralta fold-and-thrust belt. This work investigates the active transition zone that connects Muertos and Peralta: the Ocoa-Bonao-La Guacara fault zone (OBFZ). Combined detailed structural analysis at macroscopic and mesoscopic scales, regional magnetic data and seismicity analysis, geomorphic observations, fault-slip data inversion and geochronology of Quaternary deposits allow to establish the deformation pattern for the OBFZ along southern central Hispaniola. Distinct tectonic regimes have occurred successively in the Neogene, within a consistent regional NE-trending horizontal shortening: (1) a lower Miocene to Early Pleistocene D1 regime characterized by SW-directed thrusting that homogeneously affects the region; and (2) an Early/Middle Pleistocene to Holocene D2 regime of strike-slip to transpressional faulting mainly located along the OBFZ. The change is coeval with the tectonic indentation of the Beata Ridge in the back-arc region of the Hispaniola microplate. Finally, a Late Pleistocene to Holocene D3 extensional regime has a local development around the Ocoa Bay. Part of the present-day stress-field induced by the Beata Ridge collision is accommodated by the OBFZ within the Hispaniola microplate. This fault zone defines the onland transition between oceanic subduction and arc-oceanic plateau collision. Due to its length and potential to generate large earthquakes, the OBFZ must be considered in the regional seismic hazard assessment.
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- 2023
10. Dating of Holocene Sedimentary and Paleosol Sequence within the Guadalentín Depression (Murcia, SE Spain): Paleoclimatic Implications and Paleoseismic Signals
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Silva, Pablo G., primary, Roquero, Elvira, additional, Medialdea, Alicia, additional, Bardají, Teresa, additional, Élez, Javier, additional, and Rodríguez-Pascua, Miguel A., additional
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- 2022
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11. Growth and retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet, 31 000 to 15 000 years ago: the BRITICE‐CHRONO reconstruction
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Clark, Chris D., primary, Ely, Jeremy C., additional, Hindmarsh, Richard C. A., additional, Bradley, Sarah, additional, Ignéczi, Adam, additional, Fabel, Derek, additional, Ó Cofaigh, Colm, additional, Chiverrell, Richard C., additional, Scourse, James, additional, Benetti, Sara, additional, Bradwell, Tom, additional, Evans, David J. A., additional, Roberts, David H., additional, Burke, Matt, additional, Callard, S. Louise, additional, Medialdea, Alicia, additional, Saher, Margot, additional, Small, David, additional, Smedley, Rachel K., additional, Gasson, Edward, additional, Gregoire, Lauren, additional, Gandy, Niall, additional, Hughes, Anna L. C., additional, Ballantyne, Colin, additional, Bateman, Mark D., additional, Bigg, Grant R., additional, Doole, Jenny, additional, Dove, Dayton, additional, Duller, Geoff A. T., additional, Jenkins, Geraint T. H., additional, Livingstone, Stephen L., additional, McCarron, Stephen, additional, Moreton, Steve, additional, Pollard, David, additional, Praeg, Daniel, additional, Sejrup, Hans Petter, additional, Van Landeghem, Katrien J. J., additional, and Wilson, Peter, additional
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- 2022
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12. A multimethod approach to the genesis of Menga, a World Heritage megalith
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Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Prehistoria y Arqueología, HUM694: Atlas. Territorios y Paisajes en la Prehistoria Reciente de Andalucia, García Sanjuán, Leonardo, Medialdea, Alicia, Balsera Nieto, Verónica, Athanassas, Constantin, Pike, Alistair, Standish, Christopher D., Dias, María Isabel, Rodrigues, Ana Luísa, Clavero Toledo, José Luis, Wheatley, David, Cintas Peña, Marta, Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Prehistoria y Arqueología, HUM694: Atlas. Territorios y Paisajes en la Prehistoria Reciente de Andalucia, García Sanjuán, Leonardo, Medialdea, Alicia, Balsera Nieto, Verónica, Athanassas, Constantin, Pike, Alistair, Standish, Christopher D., Dias, María Isabel, Rodrigues, Ana Luísa, Clavero Toledo, José Luis, Wheatley, David, and Cintas Peña, Marta
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The scientific study of Neolithic monuments holds fundamental keys to the analysis of early social complexity. This is often impeded by the challenges involved in understanding their temporality and, particularly, their initial construction dates. This problem is most severe in monuments that were not predominantly used for burial and went on to have long biographies in which activity in later periods obliterated the material record of the earliest phases. That was certainly the case of the Menga dolmen, part of the Antequera World Heritage site (Málaga, Spain), and one of the most remarkable megaliths in Europe, for which, after nearly 200 years of explorations and research, no firm chronology existed. The research presented in this paper shows how this problem was tackled through a multimethod, scientific, and geoarchaeological approach. The analysis of 29 fresh numerical ages, including radiocarbon determinations as well as optically stimulated luminescence, thermoluminescence, and uranium-thorium dates, led to the successful establishment of Menga’s construction date and the subsequent contextualization of the monument within the social and cultural background it arose in. Placing the dolmen in the context of its time of “birth” introduces entirely new possibilities for its interpretation, both in terms of local and supralocal social and cultural processes.
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- 2022
13. Growth and retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet, 31 000 to 15 000 years ago: the BRITICE‐CHRONO reconstruction
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Clark, Chris D., Ely, Jeremy C., Hindmarsh, Richard C.A., Bradley, Sarah, Ignéczi, Adam, Fabel, Derek, Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Chiverrell, Richard C., Scourse, James, Benetti, Sara, Bradwell, Tom, Evans, David J.A., Roberts, David H., Burke, Matt, Callard, S. Louise, Medialdea, Alicia, Saher, Margot, Small, David, Smedley, Rachel K., Gasson, Edward, Gregoire, Lauren, Gandy, Niall, Hughes, Anna L.C., Ballantyne, Colin, Bateman, Mark D., Bigg, Grant R., Doole, Jenny, Dove, Dayton, Duller, Geoff A.T., Jenkins, Geraint T.H., Livingstone, Stephen L., McCarron, Stephen, Moreton, Steve, Pollard, David, Praeg, Daniel, Sejrup, Hans Petter, Van Landeghem, Katrien J.J., Wilson, Peter, Clark, Chris D., Ely, Jeremy C., Hindmarsh, Richard C.A., Bradley, Sarah, Ignéczi, Adam, Fabel, Derek, Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Chiverrell, Richard C., Scourse, James, Benetti, Sara, Bradwell, Tom, Evans, David J.A., Roberts, David H., Burke, Matt, Callard, S. Louise, Medialdea, Alicia, Saher, Margot, Small, David, Smedley, Rachel K., Gasson, Edward, Gregoire, Lauren, Gandy, Niall, Hughes, Anna L.C., Ballantyne, Colin, Bateman, Mark D., Bigg, Grant R., Doole, Jenny, Dove, Dayton, Duller, Geoff A.T., Jenkins, Geraint T.H., Livingstone, Stephen L., McCarron, Stephen, Moreton, Steve, Pollard, David, Praeg, Daniel, Sejrup, Hans Petter, Van Landeghem, Katrien J.J., and Wilson, Peter
- Abstract
The BRITICE-CHRONO consortium of researchers undertook a dating programme to constrain the timing of advance, maximum extent and retreat of the British–Irish Ice Sheet between 31 000 and 15 000 years before present. The dating campaign across Ireland and Britain and their continental shelves, and across the North Sea included 1500 days of field investigation yielding 18 000 km of marine geophysical data, 377 cores of sea floor sediments, and geomorphological and stratigraphical information at 121 sites on land; generating 690 new geochronometric ages. These findings are reported in 28 publications including synthesis into eight transect reconstructions. Here we build ice sheet-wide reconstructions consistent with these findings and using retreat patterns and dates for the inter-transect areas. Two reconstructions are presented, a wholly empirical version and a version that combines modelling with the new empirical evidence. Palaeoglaciological maps of ice extent, thickness, velocity, and flow geometry at thousand-year timesteps are presented. The maximum ice volume of 1.8 m sea level equivalent occurred at 23 ka. A larger extent than previously defined is found and widespread advance of ice to the continental shelf break is confirmed during the last glacial. Asynchrony occurred in the timing of maximum extent and onset of retreat, ranging from 30 to 22 ka. The tipping point of deglaciation at 22 ka was triggered by ice stream retreat and saddle collapses. Analysis of retreat rates leads us to accept our hypothesis that the marine-influenced sectors collapsed rapidly. First order controls on ice-sheet demise were glacio-isostatic loading triggering retreat of marine sectors, aided by glaciological instabilities and then climate warming finished off the smaller, terrestrial ice sheet. Overprinted on this signal were second order controls arising from variations in trough topographies and with sector-scale ice geometric readjustments arising from dispositions in the ge
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- 2022
14. Violet stimulated luminescence as an alternative for dating complex colluvial sediments in the Atacama Desert
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Medialdea, Alicia, Brill, Dominik, King, Georgina E., Zander, Anja, Lopez-Ramirez, Maria Rosa, Bartz, Melanie, Brueckner, Helmut, Medialdea, Alicia, Brill, Dominik, King, Georgina E., Zander, Anja, Lopez-Ramirez, Maria Rosa, Bartz, Melanie, and Brueckner, Helmut
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Luminescence dating has become a key tool in studies of the Quaternary. The typically stable luminescence response of quartz grains and the absence of a significant internal dose, make quartz minerals the preferred dosimeter for monitoring the burial dose in sediments. Unfortunately, the reliability of conventional OSL (optically stimulated luminescence) dating, based on blue stimulation, can be compromised when the luminescence decay is not dominated by a rapidly decaying and stable part of the luminescence signal (i.e. the fast component). On the other hand, standard methods in luminescence dating are limited to ages of a few hundred kiloyears. In this study, violet stimulated luminescence (VSL) has been used as a means to overcome both problems, applied to a series of colluvial deposits in the Atacama Desert, Chile. Quartz from this region, characterized by poor blue-OSL response, showed a reproducible and stable VSL signal capable of recovering given doses up to -500 Gy and a saturation dose twice as high as conventional OSL. The VSL response from these samples has been studied in detail and the estimated ages have been compared with an already established chronology for the same site, based on IRSL of potassium feldspar single grains. Results agree for the dose range of the profile studied, -100-250 Gy, equivalent to ages of 29-79 ka confirming the suitability of VSL for dating sedimentary quartz with unreliable blue-OSL response and to extend the age range of conventional OSL dating.
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- 2022
15. The Dorothy Garrod Site: a new Middle Stone Age locality in Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania
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Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Fundación Palarq, Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Marín, Juan, Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Uribelarrea, David, Solano-Megías, Irene, Asiaín, Raquel, Baquedano, Enrique, Domínguez-Rodrigo, Manuel, Gidna, Agness, Medialdea, Alicia, Steven, Hekima Mwamakimbula, Haruni Chilonzi, Daniel, Arteaga, Carlos, Mabulla, Audax, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Fundación Palarq, Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Marín, Juan, Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Uribelarrea, David, Solano-Megías, Irene, Asiaín, Raquel, Baquedano, Enrique, Domínguez-Rodrigo, Manuel, Gidna, Agness, Medialdea, Alicia, Steven, Hekima Mwamakimbula, Haruni Chilonzi, Daniel, Arteaga, Carlos, and Mabulla, Audax
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Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) is a key site for the study of human evolution as well as the origin of modern humans and the Middle Stone Age (MSA). In this study, we present a new MSA location named Dorothy Garrod Site (DGS), found in the main branch of Olduvai Gorge. The site has only one archaeological level, located stratigraphically in the Upper Ndutu. Although it has not yet been possible to radiometrically date it, it has yielded numerous archaeological remains with a functional association between the faunal remains and the lithic industry. The fauna identifed includes Alcelaphini, Hippotragini, and Equidae, some of which present percussion marks and evidence of burning. The lithic industry involved knapping using discoid methods. The retouched blanks are denticulates and retouched fakes with, up to now, a total absence of points. DGS is therefore a new site that will aid our understanding of modern human occupations in northern Tanzania in a period for which there is a dearth of properly contextualised archaeological evidence.
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- 2022
16. Geomorphological, chronological, and paleoenvironmental context of the Mousterian site at Roca San Miguel (Arén, Huesca, Spain) from the penultimate to the last glacial cycle
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Gobierno de Aragón, Peña-Monné, José Luis, Montes Ramírez, Lourdes, Sampietro-Vattuone, María Marta, Domingo Martínez, Rafael, Medialdea, Alicia, Bartolomé, Miguel, Rubio Fernández, Virginia, García Giménez, Rosario, Turú, Valentí, Ros, Xavier, Baró, Pere, Bernal-Wormull, Juan Luis, Edwards, Lawrence, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Gobierno de Aragón, Peña-Monné, José Luis, Montes Ramírez, Lourdes, Sampietro-Vattuone, María Marta, Domingo Martínez, Rafael, Medialdea, Alicia, Bartolomé, Miguel, Rubio Fernández, Virginia, García Giménez, Rosario, Turú, Valentí, Ros, Xavier, Baró, Pere, Bernal-Wormull, Juan Luis, and Edwards, Lawrence
- Abstract
The Roca San Miguel (RSM) archaeological site was occupied during Mousterian times. Here we present a geoarchaeological and paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the site. Five stratigraphic units (A to E) formed by different archaeological levels are identified. Three optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages show that Unit A dates to between 169.6 ± 9.1 and 151.9 ± 11.1 ka, during the penultimate glacial period (PGP), and contains numerous signs of recurring hearths. Unit B is unexcavated. Unit C dates to between 118.9 ± 11.5 and 103.4 ± 6.9 ka (late Eemian–marine isotope stage (MIS) 5d) and shows an abundance of lithic remains as well as some faunal elements. Unit C is covered by Unit D, which incorporates materials moved downslope, and is dated at 81.2 ± 4.7 ka. These OSL ages concur with U/Th ages (129.3 ± 1.5 and 123.6 ± 0.6 ka) derived from a flowstone covered by both -C and Dpost-flowstone units. Finally, Unit E covers the archaeological site, which was partially eroded during MIS2. The robust and well-constrained chronology of the RSM site and surroundings enables the establishment of its evolutionary model from the PGP to the last glacial cycle. The RSM site is the oldest Neanderthal occupation accurately dated in the Pre-Pyrenean region.
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- 2022
17. El yacimiento musteriense de Roca San Miguel (Arén, Prepirineo de Huesca)
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Montes Ramírez, Lourdes, primary, Domingo, Rafael, primary, Sampietro-Vattuone, Maria Marta, primary, Medialdea, Alicia, primary, and Peña Monné, José Luis, primary
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Retreat dynamics of the eastern sector of the British-Irish Ice Sheet during the last glaciation
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Evans, David J. A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Clark, Chris D., Medialdea, Alicia, Callard, Louise, Grimoldi, Elena, Chiverrell, Richard C., Ely, Jeremy, Dove, Dayton, Cofaigh, Colm O., Saher, Margot, Bradwell, Tom, Moreton, Steven G., Fabel, Derek, Bradley, Sarah L., Evans, David J. A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Clark, Chris D., Medialdea, Alicia, Callard, Louise, Grimoldi, Elena, Chiverrell, Richard C., Ely, Jeremy, Dove, Dayton, Cofaigh, Colm O., Saher, Margot, Bradwell, Tom, Moreton, Steven G., Fabel, Derek, and Bradley, Sarah L.
- Abstract
The findings of BRITICE-CHRONO Transect 2 through the North Sea Basin and eastern England are reported. We define ice-sheet marginal oscillation between -31 and 16 ka, with seven distinctive former ice-sheet limits (L1-7) constrained by Bayesian statistical analysis. The southernmost limit of the North Sea Lobe is recorded by the Bolders Bank Formation (L1; 25.8-24.6 ka). L2 represents ice-sheet oscillation and early retreat to the northern edge of the Dogger Bank (23.5-22.2 ka), with the Garret Hill Moraine in north Norfolk recording a significant regional readvance to L3 at 21.5-20.8 ka. Ice-marginal oscillations at similar to 26-21 ka resulted in L1, L2 and L3 being partially to totally overprinted. Ice-dammed lakes related to L1-3, including Lake Humber, are dated at 24.1-22.3 ka. Ice-sheet oscillation and retreat from L4 to L5 occurred between 19.7 and 17.3 ka, with grounding zone wedges marking an important transition from terrestrial to marine tidewater conditions, triggered by the opening of the Dogger Lake spillway between 19.9 and 17.5 ka. L6 relates to ice retreat under glacimarine conditions and final ice retreat into the Firth of Forth by 15.8 ka. L7 (-15 ka) represents an ice retreat from Bosies Bank into the Moray Firth. Copyright (C) 2021 The Authors Journal of Quaternary Science Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
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- 2021
19. Pattern, style and timing of British–Irish Ice Sheet advance and retreat over the last 45 000 years: evidence from NW Scotland and the adjacent continental shelf
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Bradwell, Tom, Fabel, Derek, Clark, Chris D., Chiverrell, Richard C., Small, David, Smedley, Rachel K., Saher, Margot H., Moreton, Steven G., Dove, Dayton, Callard, S. Louise, Duller, Geoff A. T., Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Burke, Matthew J., McDonald, Neil, Gilgannon, Sean, Morgan, Sally, Roberts, David H., Cofaigh, Colm ó, Bradwell, Tom, Fabel, Derek, Clark, Chris D., Chiverrell, Richard C., Small, David, Smedley, Rachel K., Saher, Margot H., Moreton, Steven G., Dove, Dayton, Callard, S. Louise, Duller, Geoff A. T., Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Burke, Matthew J., McDonald, Neil, Gilgannon, Sean, Morgan, Sally, Roberts, David H., and Cofaigh, Colm ó
- Abstract
Predicting the future response of ice sheets to climate warming and rising global sea level is important but difficult. This is especially so when fast‐flowing glaciers or ice streams, buffered by ice shelves, are grounded on beds below sea level. What happens when these ice shelves are removed? And how do the ice stream and the surrounding ice sheet respond to the abruptly altered boundary conditions? To address these questions and others we present new geological, geomorphological, geophysical and geochronological data from the ice‐stream‐dominated NW sector of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS). The study area covers around 45 000 km2 of NW Scotland and the surrounding continental shelf. Alongside seabed geomorphological mapping and Quaternary sediment analysis, we use a suite of over 100 new absolute ages (including cosmogenic‐nuclide exposure ages, optically stimulated luminescence ages and radiocarbon dates) collected from onshore and offshore, to build a sector‐wide ice‐sheet reconstruction combining all available evidence with Bayesian chronosequence modelling. Using this information we present a detailed assessment of ice‐sheet advance/retreat history, and the glaciological connections between different areas of the NW BIIS sector, at different times during the last glacial cycle. The results show a highly dynamic, partly marine, partly terrestrial, ice‐sheet sector undergoing large size variations in response to sub‐millennial‐scale climatic (Dansgaard–Oeschger) cycles over the last 45 000 years. Superimposed on these trends we identify internally driven instabilities, operating at higher frequency, conditioned by local topographic factors, tidewater dynamics and glaciological feedbacks during deglaciation. Specifically, our new evidence indicates extensive marine‐terminating ice‐sheet glaciation of the NW BIIS sector during Greenland Stadials 12 to 9 – prior to the main ‘Late Weichselian’ ice‐sheet glaciation. After a period of restricted glaciation
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- 2021
20. Pattern, style and timing of British–Irish Ice Sheet retreat: Shetland and northern North Sea sector
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Bradwell, Tom, Small, David, Fabel, Derek, Clark, Chris D., Chiverrell, Richard C., Saher, Margot H., Dove, Dayton, Callard, S. Louise, Burke, Matthew J., Moreton, Steven G., Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Roberts, David H., Golledge, Nicholas R., Finlayson, Andrew, Morgan, Sally, Cofaigh, Colm Ó, Bradwell, Tom, Small, David, Fabel, Derek, Clark, Chris D., Chiverrell, Richard C., Saher, Margot H., Dove, Dayton, Callard, S. Louise, Burke, Matthew J., Moreton, Steven G., Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Roberts, David H., Golledge, Nicholas R., Finlayson, Andrew, Morgan, Sally, and Cofaigh, Colm Ó
- Abstract
The offshore sector around Shetland remains one of the least well‐studied parts of the former British–Irish Ice Sheet with several long‐standing scientific issues unresolved. These key issues include (i) the dominance of a locally sourced ‘Shetland ice cap’ vs an invasive Fennoscandian Ice Sheet; (ii) the flow configuration and style of glaciation at the Last Glacial Maximum (i.e. terrestrial vs marine glaciation); (iii) the nature of confluence between the British–Irish and Fennoscandian Ice Sheets; (iv) the cause, style and rate of ice sheet separation; and (v) the wider implications of ice sheet uncoupling on the tempo of subsequent deglaciation. As part of the Britice‐Chrono project, we present new geological (seabed cores), geomorphological, marine geophysical and geochronological data from the northernmost sector of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet (north of 59.5°N) to address these questions. The study area covers ca. 95 000 km2, an area approximately the size of Ireland, and includes the islands of Shetland and the surrounding continental shelf, some of the continental slope, and the western margin of the Norwegian Channel. We collect and analyse data from onshore in Shetland and along key transects offshore, to establish the most coherent picture, so far, of former ice‐sheet deglaciation in this important sector. Alongside new seabed mapping and Quaternary sediment analysis, we use a multi‐proxy suite of new isotopic age assessments, including 32 cosmogenic‐nuclide exposure ages from glacially transported boulders and 35 radiocarbon dates from deglacial marine sediments, to develop a synoptic sector‐wide reconstruction combining strong onshore and offshore geological evidence with Bayesian chronosequence modelling. The results show widespread and significant spatial fluctuations in size, shape and flow configuration of an ice sheet/ice cap centred on, or to the east of, the Orkney–Shetland Platform, between ~30 and ~15 ka BP. At its maximum extent ca. 26–25
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- 2021
21. Timing and pace of ice‐sheet withdrawal across the marine–terrestrial transition west of Ireland during the last glaciation
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Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Callard, S. Louise, Roberts, David H., Chiverrell, Richard C., Ballantyne, C. K., Evans, David J. A., Saher, Margot, Van Landeghem, Katrien J. J., Smedley, Rachel, Benetti, Sara, Burke, Matthew, Clark, Chris D., Duller, Geoff A. T., Fabel, Derek, Livingstone, Stephen J., Mccarron, Stephen, Medialdea, Alicia, Moreton, Steven G., Sacchetti, Fabio, Ó Cofaigh, Colm, Callard, S. Louise, Roberts, David H., Chiverrell, Richard C., Ballantyne, C. K., Evans, David J. A., Saher, Margot, Van Landeghem, Katrien J. J., Smedley, Rachel, Benetti, Sara, Burke, Matthew, Clark, Chris D., Duller, Geoff A. T., Fabel, Derek, Livingstone, Stephen J., Mccarron, Stephen, Medialdea, Alicia, Moreton, Steven G., and Sacchetti, Fabio
- Abstract
Understanding the pace and drivers of marine‐based ice‐sheet retreat relies upon the integration of numerical ice‐sheet models with observations from contemporary polar ice sheets and well‐constrained palaeo‐ glaciological reconstructions. This paper provides a reconstruction of the retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) from the Atlantic shelf west of Ireland during and following the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). It uses marine‐ geophysical data and sediment cores dated by radiocarbon, combined with terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide and optically stimulated luminescence dating of onshore ice‐marginal landforms, to reconstruct the timing and rate of ice‐sheet retreat from the continental shelf and across the adjoining coastline of Ireland, thus including the switch from a marine‐ to a terrestrially‐based ice‐sheet margin. Seafloor bathymetric data in the form of moraines and grounding‐zone wedges on the continental shelf record an extensive ice sheet west of Ireland during the LGM which advanced to the outer shelf. This interpretation is supported by the presence of dated subglacial tills and overridden glacimarine sediments from across the Porcupine Bank, a westwards extension of the Irish continental shelf. The ice sheet was grounded on the outer shelf at ~26.8 ka cal BP with initial retreat underway by 25.9 ka cal BP. Retreat was not a continuous process but was punctuated by marginal oscillations until ~24.3 ka cal BP. The ice sheet thereafter retreated to the mid‐shelf where it formed a large grounding‐zone complex at ~23.7 ka cal BP. This retreat occurred in a glacimarine environment. The Aran Islands on the inner continental shelf were ice‐free by ~19.5 ka BP and the ice sheet had become largely terrestrially based by 17.3 ka BP. This suggests that the Aran Islands acted to stabilize and slow overall ice‐sheet retreat once the BIIS margin had reached the inner shelf. Our results constrain the timing of initial retreat of the BIIS from the outer shelf w
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- 2021
22. Declining discharge of glacier outburst floods through the Holocene in central Patagonia
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), University of London, Benito, Gerardo, Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Medialdea, Alicia, Machado, María J., Sancho, Carlos, Dussaillant, Alejandro, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), University of London, Benito, Gerardo, Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Medialdea, Alicia, Machado, María J., Sancho, Carlos, and Dussaillant, Alejandro
- Abstract
Glacier outburstfloods are a major hazard in glacierized catchments. Global analyses have shownreduced frequency of glacierfloods over recent decades but there is limited longer-term data on eventmagnitude and frequency. Here, we present a Holocene palaeoflood record from the Río Baker (ChileanPatagonia), quantifying the discharge and timing of glacierfloods over millennial timescales. A cata-strophicflood of 110,000 m3/s (0.11 Sv) occurred at 9.6±0.8 ka, duringfinal stages of the Late GlacialInterglacial Transition, followed byfiveflood-phases coeval or post-dating Holocene neoglacials. Highestflood frequencies occurred at 4.3e4.4 ka, with 26floods of minimum discharges of 10,000e11,000 m3/s,and 0.6 ka with 10floods exceeding 4600e5700 m3/s. The largest modern outburstflood recordedsurpassed ~3810 m3/s. Thus glacierflood magnitude declines from the order of 0.1 to 0.01 Sv over theEarly to Mid Holocene, and to 0.001 Sv in the instrumental record.
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- 2021
23. Effects of glaciation on karst hydrology and sedimentology during the Last Glacial Cycle: The case of Granito cave, Central Pyrenees (Spain)
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Diputación Provincial de Huesca, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Zaragoza, Universidad de Barcelona, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Bartolomé, Miguel, Sancho, Carlos, Benito, Gerardo, Medialdea, Alicia, Calle, Mikel, Moreno Caballud, Ana, Leunda Esnaola, María, Luetscher, Marc, Muñoz, Arsenio, Bastida, Joaquín, Cheng, Hai, Edwards, R.L., Diputación Provincial de Huesca, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Zaragoza, Universidad de Barcelona, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Bartolomé, Miguel, Sancho, Carlos, Benito, Gerardo, Medialdea, Alicia, Calle, Mikel, Moreno Caballud, Ana, Leunda Esnaola, María, Luetscher, Marc, Muñoz, Arsenio, Bastida, Joaquín, Cheng, Hai, and Edwards, R.L.
- Abstract
In Alpine regions, speleothem development on karst systems largely occurs during warm interglacial or interstadial phases due to their limited growth during cold stages. Still, recent attention has been given to the role of clastic sediments in caves, less dependent on temperature conditions. Yet, only a small number of caves worldwide preserve both speleothems and detrital deposits. Here we present an outstanding record of fine-grain laminated sediments and carbonate speleothems from the Granito cave (South Central Pyrenees, Spain) associated with seasonal to annual hydroclimatic pulses through the Last Glacial Cycle (LGC). Analysis of cave clastic facies together with new absolute dates on glacial deposits along the valley has provided new insights into the karst-glacial interactions in relation with long-term landscape evolution, with support of geomorphological, sedimentological, mineralogical, palynological, geochemical and geochronological data (U/Th series, OSL and IRSL).The Granito cave was formed before 153.6±1.2 ky (Marine Isotopic Stage, MIS 6), as indicated by the oldest stalagmites dated in the cave, although speleothem formation occurred preferentially during MIS 5 and the Holocene interglacial stages. A 60 m thick clastic deposit was IRSL dated from 71.8±5.6 ky to after 26.5±2.5 ky corresponding with the maximum ice extent (MIE) during the LGC and subsequent glacial stabilization at 30.3±1.7 – 36.2±2.2 ky. The sediment infill was produced by water ponded in the cave coeval with the presence of glacial ice blocking the cave entrance. The cave clastic sequence includes channel, slackwater and backswamp facies, interpreted to result from pulses of sediment-laden water flow under vadose and phreatic flow regimes. The cave sediment’s mineralogical composition points to an exogenous source associated with glacial till sediments overlying the hillslope above the cave and along the Ara River valley. The palynological results obtained from the cave sediments s
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- 2021
24. Experimental studies of amorphous and polycrystalline ice films using FT-RAIRS
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Mate, Belen, Medialdea, Alicia, Moreno, Miguel A., Escribano, Rafael, and Herrero, Victor J.
- Subjects
Ice crystals -- Research ,Vapor-plating -- Analysis ,Infrared spectroscopy -- Usage ,Chemicals, plastics and rubber industries - Abstract
Extensive measurements of grazing-angle reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) spectra of amorphous and crystalline ice layers deposited form the vapor phase on gold and aluminum surfaces are investigated using polarized and nonpolarized IR radiation. Special emphasis has been placed on the measurement and modeling of the spectra of thick layers (up to approximately 5mu m).
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- 2003
25. Extreme Floods in Small Mediterranean Catchments: Long-Term Response to Climate Variability and Change
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Benito, Gerardo, primary, Sanchez-Moya, Yolanda, additional, Medialdea, Alicia, additional, Barriendos, Mariano, additional, Calle, Mikel, additional, Rico, Mayte, additional, Sopeña, Alfonso, additional, and Machado, Maria, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Victoria Cabrera Site: A Middle Stone Age site at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania
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Maíllo-Fernández, J.M., Marín, J., Maíllo-Fernández, José-Manuel, Marin, Juan, Solano-Megías, Irene, Uribelarrea, David, Martín-Perea, David, Aramendi, Julia, Medialdea, Alicia, Arteaga, Carlos, Pernas-Hernández, Marta, Gidna, Agness, Neogi, Sayantani, Baudot, Eva, Narváez, Carlos, Mabulla, Audax, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN), and Technical University of Denmark [Lyngby] (DTU)
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Taphonomy ,Antilopinae ,biology ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,Olduvai Gorge ,Olduvai ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,biology.organism_classification ,Middle stone age ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Tanzania ,Lithic ,Lithic technology ,Fauna ,Human evolution ,Homo sapiens ,Middle Stone Age ,Geology ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Faunal assemblage - Abstract
Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) is a key site for the study and comprehension of human evolution in East Africa. However, the origin of Homo sapiens and the Middle Stone Age have been poorly understood in the Gorge thus far. In this study, we present the dating, taphonomic, technological and typological analyses of the lithic industry and faunal remains excavated at the Victoria Cabrera Site (VCS) during the 2017 fieldwork season. The stratigraphic sequence of the site contains several levels of fluvial origin, some of them with lithic and faunal remains. Most remains (lithics and bones) are affected by rounding processes. Infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating has provided ages between 90 and 70 ka BP for these layers that can be related to the Marine Isotope Stage 5a. Lithics are scarce and the dominant raw materials are Naibor Soit quarzite and basalt, followed by phonolite, chert and quartz as the most common raw materials. The lithic technology is based on the production of flakes obtained from prepared cores, with the discoid method and, to a lesser extent the Levallois method being the most frequently used. The retouched blanks are described as “substratum” or “domestic” tools (sidescrapers, notches or denticulates). There is just one heavy duty piece and points are absent. The faunal assemblage includes Alcelaphinae, Antilopinae and Equidae. The major parts of the unidentified faunal remains are size 3 ungulates, followed by carcasses of size 2 and size 4 species. We cannot relate lithic and bones because no cut marks or percussion marks have been identified and carnivore action is scarce. In sum, VCS represents the first accurately dated Middle Stone Age site, with lithic and faunal remains in Olduvai Gorge.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Origin and timing of past hillslope activity in the hyper-arid core of the Atacama Desert The formation of fine sediment lobes along the Chuculay Fault System, Northern Chile
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May, Simon Matthias, Meine, Lennart, Hoffmeister, Dirk, Brill, Dominik, Medialdea, Alicia, Wennrich, Volker, Groebner, Marie, Schulte, Philipp, Steininger, Florian, Deprez, Maxim, de Kock, Tim, Bubenzer, Olaf, May, Simon Matthias, Meine, Lennart, Hoffmeister, Dirk, Brill, Dominik, Medialdea, Alicia, Wennrich, Volker, Groebner, Marie, Schulte, Philipp, Steininger, Florian, Deprez, Maxim, de Kock, Tim, and Bubenzer, Olaf
- Abstract
Hillslopes represent areas of predominant denudation and constitute the transition and trajectory to floodplains; they play a crucial role in understanding the longterm landscape evolution of desert environments. However, although hillslope processes are known to be very slow or even stagnant in (hyper-) arid environments, process mechanisms under the virtual absence of water are poorly understood, and process rates are essentially unknown. Based on irrigation experiments, different monitoring techniques including drone-based high-resolution digital elevation models, geomorphological, stratigraphical, geochronological (OSL), sedimentological and geochemical investigations, as well as mu CT scans of sediment cores, this contribution presents detailed insights into the chronostratigraphy of tongue-shaped, 50 m-long and 30 m-wide fine sediment lobes located along a 10-30 degrees steep thrust-related slope east of the Salar Grande (Atacama, Chile). Irrigation experiments were performed to gain insights into precipitation thresholds for surface runoff and hillslope dynamics. Although artificial rainfall intensities were similar to 46 mm/h, infiltration was 100%, and the experiments did not initiate surface runoff or (detectable) slope material displacements. In addition, a distinct stratigraphic pattern with buried paleo-surfaces and paleo-biological surface crusts suggests increased hillslope activity during the late Pleistocene, potentially driven by changes of (fog-induced) humidity, salt-related shrink and swell processes, or paleo-seismic activity. While a variety of geo-bio-archives document periods of increased precipitation in the Andean parts of the Atacama Desert throughout the Quaternary, evidence for contemporaneous paleoclimatic changes from areas disconnected to Andean precipitation fluctuations (i.e., the Coastal Cordillera) is scarce. In this regard, the investigated landforms potentially represent one of only few sediment records recording paleoclimatic
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- 2020
28. Identification of humid periods in the Atacama Desert through hillslope activity established by infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating
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Medialdea, Alicia, May, Simon Matthias, Brill, Dominik, King, Georgina, Ritter, Benedikt, Wennrich, Volker, Bartz, Melanie, Zander, Anja, Kuiper, Klaudia, Hurtado, Santiago, Hoffmeister, Dirk, Schulte, Philipp, Groebner, Marie, Opitz, Stephan, Brueckner, Helmut, Bubenzer, Olaf, Medialdea, Alicia, May, Simon Matthias, Brill, Dominik, King, Georgina, Ritter, Benedikt, Wennrich, Volker, Bartz, Melanie, Zander, Anja, Kuiper, Klaudia, Hurtado, Santiago, Hoffmeister, Dirk, Schulte, Philipp, Groebner, Marie, Opitz, Stephan, Brueckner, Helmut, and Bubenzer, Olaf
- Abstract
Geological records indicate that the hyper-aridity in the Atacama Desert has prevailed since at least the mid-Miocene, with shorter periods of increased humidity punctuating long-term aridity. The 7-m-high accumulation of colluvial sediments at the Salar Grande (21 degrees S/70 degrees W) studied here provides a key palaeoclimate record to understand hillslope dynamics and its relation to humid periods. While 1 degrees Be surface exposure ages point to long-term surface stability of the flat upslope surface, a combination of humidity-driven soil creep, overland flow and soil creep related to seismic shaking, caused denudation of the hillslope and accumulation of several metres of colluvium over much shorter timescales during the last 130 ka. A robust chronology for the hillslope sediments has been established by using Infrared Stimulated luminescence (pIR-IR225 protocol) on K-feldspar extracts from nine samples collected within the accumulation. A series of tests has been carried out to confirm the suitability of the method. The estimated ages indicate accelerated sedimentation at 35-80 ka, and 100-130 ka, which are interpreted as periods with more humid climate conditions than present. These findings agree with climate variations in the hyper-arid Atacama indicated by the activity of coastal alluvial fans and river catchments.
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- 2020
29. Impacts of sediment connectivity on Holocene alluvial records across a Mediterranean basin (Guadalentin River, SE-Spain)
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Rodriguez-Lloveras, Xavier, Machado, Maria J., Sanchez-Moya, Yolanda, Calle, Mikel, Medialdea, Alicia, Sopena, Alfonso, Benito, Gerardo, Rodriguez-Lloveras, Xavier, Machado, Maria J., Sanchez-Moya, Yolanda, Calle, Mikel, Medialdea, Alicia, Sopena, Alfonso, and Benito, Gerardo
- Abstract
Two contiguous alluvial valleys (Maria and Guadalupe sectors) of the upper Guadalentin River (SE Spain) show distinct Holocene alluvial architecture (cut-and-fill, nested and stepped fill terraces), revealing a strong control of valley morphology and bedrock barriers on sediment delivery, storage and preservation. The headwater valley (Maria sector) preserves four morphosedimentary alluvial units corresponding to two palaeogeographic stages. Morphosedimentary unit (MSU1), the most extensive, is a major depositional valley infill dominated by sand and silt texture, showing three stratigraphic sets dated 9000-8500, 5300-4800, 4000-3000 cal BP. This vertically stacked alluvial accumulation occurs upstream of a narrow bedrock channel, that limited sediment connectivity with the downstream Guadalupe sector. Between 3000 and 2350 cal BP, a 15-m deep incision on MSU1 occurred, and subsequent cut-and-fill cycles generated three alluvial terraces dated at 2350-1900 cal BP (MSU2), 1800-700 cal BP (MSU3), and post-400 years (MSU4). In the downstream valley (Guadalupe sector), six flights of alluvial terraces (MSUg1 to MSUg6) were formed by episodic aggradation and quasi-continuous incision, in response to baselevel changes of the lower Guadalentin River during the Holocene. Alluvial chronologies in these two contiguous valleys show out-of-phase sedimentation periods under low connectivity conditions (9-3 ka), and in-phase cut-and-fill cycles after valley re-connection (post-3.0 ka). The late Holocene alluvial activity periods also coincide with morpho-stratigraphic data from the lower Guadalentin, indicating that fluvial connectivity throughout the catchment was only completed in the late Holocene.
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- 2020
30. Extreme Floods in Small Mediterranean Catchments: Long-Term Response to Climate Variability and Change
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Benito, Gerardo, Sanchez-Moya, Yolanda, Medialdea, Alicia, Barriendos, Mariano, Calle, Mikel, Rico, Mayte, Sopena, Alfonso, Machado, Maria J., Benito, Gerardo, Sanchez-Moya, Yolanda, Medialdea, Alicia, Barriendos, Mariano, Calle, Mikel, Rico, Mayte, Sopena, Alfonso, and Machado, Maria J.
- Abstract
Climate change implies changes in the frequency and magnitude of flood events. The influence of climate variability on flooding was evaluated by an analysis of sedimentary (palaeofloods) and documentary archives. A 500-year palaeoflood record at Montilea River (657 km(2) in catchment area), eastern Spain, revealed up to 31 palaeofloods with a range of discharges of 20-950 m(3) s(-1), and with at least five floods exceeding 740-950 m(3) s(-1). This information contrasts with the available gauged flood registers (since year 1971) with an annual maximum daily discharge of 129 m(3) s(-1). Our palaeoflood dataset indicates flood cluster episodes at (1) 1570-1620, (2) 1775-1795, (3) 1850-1890, and (4) 1920-1969. Flood rich periods 1 and 3 corresponded to cooler than usual (about 0.3 degrees C and 0.2 degrees C) climate oscillations, whereas 2 and 4 were characterised by higher inter-annual climatic variability (floods and droughts). This high inter-annual rainfall variability increased over the last 150 years, leading to a reduction of annual maximum flow. Flood quantiles (>50 years) calculated from palaeoflood+gauged data showed 30%-40% higher peak discharges than those using only instrumental records, whereas when increasing the catchment area (1500 km(2)) the discharge estimation variance decreased to-15%. The results reflect the higher sensitivity of small catchments to changes on flood magnitude and frequency due to climate variability whereas a larger catchment buffers the response due to the limited extent of convective storms. Our findings show that extended flood records provide robust knowledge about hazardous flooding that can assist in the prioritization of low-regret actions for flood-risk adaptation to climate change.
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- 2020
31. Revisiting an old profile: an updated geoarchaeological study at Nasera Rockshelter (Tanzania)
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Manuel Martin-Perea, David, Maillo-Fernandez, Jose-Manuel, Medialdea, Alicia, Marin, Juan, Solano-Megias, Irene, Gidna, Agness, Mabulla, Audax, Manuel Martin-Perea, David, Maillo-Fernandez, Jose-Manuel, Medialdea, Alicia, Marin, Juan, Solano-Megias, Irene, Gidna, Agness, and Mabulla, Audax
- Abstract
Nasera Rockshelter hosts a highly continuous sedimentary record, containing a wide array of archaeological remains from Middle Stone Age, Later Stone Age and Pastoralist occupations. Excavated by L. Leakey and M. Mehlman, geological studies carried out by R. Hay included granulometric and general mineralogical analyses but lacked individualized, detailed description and interpretation of each of the 25 levels exposed. This study presents updated detailed geological descriptions and interpretations of 17 levels exposed during excavations in 2018.
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- 2020
32. Impacts of sediment connectivity on Holocene alluvial records across a Mediterranean basin (Guadalentín River, SE-Spain)
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Rodriguez-Lloveras, Xavier, Machado, María José, Calle, Mikel, Medialdea, Alicia, Sopeña, Alfonso, Benito, Gerardo, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Rodriguez-Lloveras, Xavier, Machado, María José, Calle, Mikel, Medialdea, Alicia, Sopeña, Alfonso, and Benito, Gerardo
- Abstract
Two contiguous alluvial valleys (Maria and Guadalupe sectors) of the upper Guadalentín River (SE Spain) show distinct Holocene alluvial architecture (cut-and-fill, nested and stepped fill terraces), revealing a strong control of valley morphology and bedrock barriers on sediment delivery, storage and preservation. The headwater valley (Maria sector) preserves four morphosedimentary alluvial units corresponding to two palaeogeographic stages. Morphosedimentary unit (MSU1), the most extensive, is a major depositional valley infill dominated by sand and silt texture, showing three stratigraphic sets dated 9000–8500, 5300–4800, 4000–3000 cal BP. This vertically stacked alluvial accumulation occurs upstream of a narrow bedrock channel, that limited sediment connectivity with the downstream Guadalupe sector. Between 3000 and 2350 cal BP, a 15-m deep incision on MSU1 occurred, and subsequent cut-and-fill cycles generated three alluvial terraces dated at 2350–1900 cal BP (MSU2), 1800–700 cal BP (MSU3), and post-400 years (MSU4). In the downstream valley (Guadalupe sector), six flights of alluvial terraces (MSUg1 to MSUg6) were formed by episodic aggradation and quasi-continuous incision, in response to baselevel changes of the lower Guadalentín River during the Holocene. Alluvial chronologies in these two contiguous valleys show out-of-phase sedimentation periods under low connectivity conditions (9–3 ka), and in-phase cut-and-fill cycles after valley re-connection (post-3.0 ka). The late Holocene alluvial activity periods also coincide with morpho-stratigraphic data from the lower Guadalentín, indicating that fluvial connectivity throughout the catchment was only completed in the late Holocene.
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- 2020
33. Revisiting an old profile: an updated geoarchaeological study at Nasera Rockshelter (Tanzania)
- Author
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MICIU/ICTI2017-2020/PGC2018‐094122‐B‐100, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Fundación Palarq, Instituto del Patrimonio Cultural de España, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (España), Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Medialdea, Alicia, Marín, Jesús, Solano-Megías, Irene, Gidna, Agnes, Mabulla, Audax, MICIU/ICTI2017-2020/PGC2018‐094122‐B‐100, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Fundación Palarq, Instituto del Patrimonio Cultural de España, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (España), Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Medialdea, Alicia, Marín, Jesús, Solano-Megías, Irene, Gidna, Agnes, and Mabulla, Audax
- Abstract
Nasera Rockshelter hosts a highly continuous sedimentary record, containing a wide array of archaeological remains from Middle Stone Age, Later Stone Age and Pastoralist occupations. Excavated by L. Leakey and M. Mehlman, geological studies carried out by R. Hay included granulometric and general mineralogical analyses but lacked individualized, detailed description and interpretation of each of the 25 levels exposed. This study presents updated detailed geological descriptions and interpretations of 17 levels exposed during excavations in 2018.
- Published
- 2020
34. Extreme Floods in Small Mediterranean Catchments: Long-Term Response to Climate Variability and Change
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Benito, Gerardo, Sánchez Moya, Yolanda, Medialdea, Alicia, Barriendos, Mariano, Calle, Mikel, Rico, María Teresa, Sopeña, Alfonso, Machado, María José, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Benito, Gerardo, Sánchez Moya, Yolanda, Medialdea, Alicia, Barriendos, Mariano, Calle, Mikel, Rico, María Teresa, Sopeña, Alfonso, and Machado, María José
- Abstract
Climate change implies changes in the frequency and magnitude of flood events. The influence of climate variability on flooding was evaluated by an analysis of sedimentary (palaeofloods) and documentary archives. A 500-year palaeoflood record at Montlleó River (657 km2 in catchment area), eastern Spain, revealed up to 31 palaeofloods with a range of discharges of 20–950 m3 s−1, and with at least five floods exceeding 740–950 m3 s−1. This information contrasts with the available gauged flood registers (since year 1971) with an annual maximum daily discharge of 129 m3 s−1. Our palaeoflood dataset indicates flood cluster episodes at (1) 1570–1620, (2) 1775–1795, (3) 1850–1890, and (4) 1920–1969. Flood rich periods 1 and 3 corresponded to cooler than usual (about 0.3 °C and 0.2 °C) climate oscillations, whereas 2 and 4 were characterised by higher inter-annual climatic variability (floods and droughts). This high inter-annual rainfall variability increased over the last 150 years, leading to a reduction of annual maximum flow. Flood quantiles (>50 years) calculated from palaeoflood+gauged data showed 30%–40% higher peak discharges than those using only instrumental records, whereas when increasing the catchment area (1500 km2) the discharge estimation variance decreased to ~15%. The results reflect the higher sensitivity of small catchments to changes on flood magnitude and frequency due to climate variability whereas a larger catchment buffers the response due to the limited extent of convective storms. Our findings show that extended flood records provide robust knowledge about hazardous flooding that can assist in the prioritization of low-regret actions for flood-risk adaptation to climate change.
- Published
- 2020
35. Reply to comments by Bourgois et al. (2019) on: 'Glacial lake evolution and Atlantic-Pacific drainage reversals during deglaciation of the Patagonia Ice Sheet'
- Author
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Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Bendle, Jacob M., Matthews, Ian P., Palmer, Adrian P., Benito, Gerardo, Davies, Bethan J., Sancho, Carlos, Pike, Joshua H., Martin, Julian R.V., Fabel, Derek, and Medialdea, Alicia
- Abstract
We welcome the comments of Bourgois et al. (2019) and the opportunity to debate geomorphology, geochronology and palaeoclimate during the Late Glacial Interglacial Transition (LGIT, ~18.0-8.0 ka) in the region of the Río Baker, central Patagonia. Bourgois et al. (2019) conclude that we have propagated inconsistencies in our proposed reconstruction of palaeolake evolution due to geomorphic analytical bias. However, in our view the empirical geomorphological data we have compiled over many field seasons has resulted in a data-rich (though still incomplete) relative chronology that enables us to evaluate inconsistencies in landscape interpretations from previously published geochronological datasets. We would argue that a geochronological bias, over any geomorphological bias, has represented the main reason for multiple landscape interpretations in this region. Indeed, the conflicting palaeolake evolution models published for the Río Baker basin (Turner et al. 2005; Bell, 2008; Hein et al., 2010; Bourgois et al., 2016; Glasser et al., 2016; Martinod et al., 2016) was a major impetus for our paper. These contrasting models were in part a result of the coincident publication of two separate geochronological datasets in 2016, one focused on optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of palaeolake landforms (Glasser et al., 2016), the other cosmogenic nuclide exposure ages (Bourgois et al., 2016). Both datasets provided updates on what we termed the Turner/Hein model in Thorndycraft et al. (2019), but as they did not have access to each other’s datasets they ended up with different landscape interpretations.
- Published
- 2019
36. Sedimentation during MIS 3 at the eastern margins of the Glacial Lake Humber basin, England
- Author
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Evans, David J.A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Medialdea, Alicia, Ely, Jeremy, Moreton, Steven G., Clark, Chris D., and Fabel, Derek
- Abstract
The stratigraphic sequence at North Cave, on the eastern margins of the Lake Humber basin, records the deposition of a fluvioperiglacial fan (LFs 1–4), with early sedimentation (LF1) dating to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 (optically stimulated luminescence date range 41.8–38.6 ka and 14C dates 41.6–49 ka BP). Three phases of permafrost and ice wedge development during MIS 3 are evident and indicate possible fan abandonment and hence periods of reduced nival runoff. Involution structures dated to 11.1 ka with large boulders and fine‐grained sorted circles in LF4b are interpreted as periglacially cryoturbated littoral deposits with boulders derived from anchor ice, initially deposited at the margins of Lake Humber up to an altitude of 8 m OD during MIS 2. The style and age of fluvioperiglacial fan deposition at North Cave is compatible with several mid‐Devensian sites around Britain characterized by significant nival melt and run‐off from steeply incised valleys in permafrozen cuesta landscapes. This phase of fluvioperiglacial fan aggradation to near or below 0 m OD is recorded around the glacial lakes Humber and Fenland basins and indicates that no glacial lakes existed at that time.
- Published
- 2018
37. Sedimentation during Marine Isotope Stage 3 at the eastern margins of the Glacial Lake Humber basin, England
- Author
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Evans, David J.A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Medialdea, Alicia, Ely, Jeremy, Moreton, Steven G., Clark, Chris D., and Fabel, Derek
- Abstract
The stratigraphic sequence at North Cave, on the eastern margins of the Lake Humber basin, records the deposition of a fluvioperiglacial fan (LFs 1–4), with early sedimentation (LF1) dating to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 (optically stimulated luminescence date range 41.8–38.6 ka and 14C dates 41.6–49 ka BP). Three phases of permafrost and ice wedge development during MIS 3 are evident and indicate possible fan abandonment and hence periods of reduced nival runoff. Involution structures dated to 11.1 ka with large boulders and fine‐grained sorted circles in LF4b are interpreted as periglacially cryoturbated littoral deposits with boulders derived from anchor ice, initially deposited at the margins of Lake Humber up to an altitude of 8 m OD during MIS 2. The style and age of fluvioperiglacial fan deposition at North Cave is compatible with several mid‐Devensian sites around Britain characterized by significant nival melt and run‐off from steeply incised valleys in permafrozen cuesta landscapes. This phase of fluvioperiglacial fan aggradation to near or below 0 m OD is recorded around the glacial lakes Humber and Fenland basins and indicates that no glacial lakes existed at that time.
- Published
- 2018
38. Ice marginal dynamics of the last British-Irish Ice Sheet in the southern North Sea: Ice limits, timing and the influence of the Dogger Bank
- Author
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Roberts, David H., Evans, David J.A., Callard, S. Louise, Clark, Chris D., Bateman, Mark D., Medialdea, Alicia, Dove, Dayton, Cotterill, Carol J., Saher, Margot, Cofaigh, Colm Ó, Chiverrell, Richard C., Moreton, Steven G., Fabel, Derek, and Bradwell, Tom
- Abstract
The southern North Sea is a particularly important area for understanding the behaviour of the British-Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) during the last glacial cycle. It preserves a record of the maximum extent of the eastern sector of the BIIS as well as evidence for multiple different ice flow phases and the dynamic re-organisation of the BIIS. However, to date, the known ice sheet history and geochronology of this region is predominantly derived from onshore geological evidence, and the offshore imprint and dynamic history of the last ice sheet remain largely unknown. Using new data collected by the BRITICE-CHRONO project this paper explores the origin and age of the Dogger Bank; re-assesses the extent and age of the glaciogenic deposits across the shallow areas of the North Sea between the Dogger Bank and the north Norfolk coast and; re-examines the dynamic behaviour of the BIIS in the southern North Sea between 31.6 and 21.5 ka.\ud \ud This paper shows the core of the Dogger Bank to be composed glaciolacustrine sediment deposited between 31.6 and 25.8 ka. Following its formation the western end of the Dogger lake was overridden with ice reaching ∼54°N where the ice margin is co-incident with the southerly extent of subglacial tills previously mapped as Bolders Bank Fm. This initial ice override and retreat northwards back across the Dogger lake was complete by 23.1 ka, but resulted in widespread compressive glaciotectonism of the lake sediments and the formation of thrust moraine complexes. Along the northern edge of the bank moraines are on-lapped by later phase glaciolacustrine and marine sediments but do not show evidence of subsequent ice override.\ud \ud The shallow seafloor to the west and southwest of the Dogger Bank records several later phases of ice advance and retreat as the North Sea Lobe flowed between the Dogger Bank and the Yorkshire/Lincolnshire coasts and reached North Norfolk. New optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages from Garrett Hill on outwash limit the arrival of the BIIS on the Norfolk coast to 22.8–21.5 ka. Multiple till sheets and chains of moraines on the seafloor north of Norfolk mark dynamic oscillation of the North Sea Lobe margin as it retreated northwards. This pattern of behaviour is broadly synchronous with the terrestrial record of deposition of subglacial, glaciofluvial and glaciolacustrine sediments along the Yorkshire coast which relate to post Dimlington Stadial ice marginal oscillations after 21.5 ka.\ud \ud With respect to forcing mechanisms it is likely that during the early phases of the last glacial maximum (∼30-23ka) the interaction between the southern margin of the BIIS and the Dogger Lake was critical in influencing flow instability and rapid ice advance and retreat. However, during the latter part of the last glacial maximum (22–21 ka) late-phase ice advance in the southern North Sea became restricted to the western side of the Dogger Bank which was a substantial topographic feature by this time. This topographic confinement, in addition to decoupling of the BIIS and the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet (FIS) further north, enabled ice to reach the north Norfolk coast, overprinting the seabed with late-phase tills of the Bolders Bank Fm.
- Published
- 2018
39. Victoria Cabrera Site: A Middle Stone Age site at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania
- Author
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Maíllo-Fernández, José-Manuel, Marín, Juan, Solano Megías, Irene, Uribelarrea Del Val, David, Martín Perea, David Manuel, Aramendi, Julia, Medialdea, Alicia, Arteaga, Carlos, Pernas Hernandez, Marta, Gidna, Agnes, Neogi, Sayantani, Baudot, Eva, Narváez, Carlos, Mabulla, Audax, Maíllo-Fernández, José-Manuel, Marín, Juan, Solano Megías, Irene, Uribelarrea Del Val, David, Martín Perea, David Manuel, Aramendi, Julia, Medialdea, Alicia, Arteaga, Carlos, Pernas Hernandez, Marta, Gidna, Agnes, Neogi, Sayantani, Baudot, Eva, Narváez, Carlos, and Mabulla, Audax
- Abstract
Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) is a key site for the study and comprehension of human evolution in East Africa. However, the origin of Homo sapiens and the Middle Stone Age have been poorly understood in the Gorge thus far. In this study, we present the dating, taphonomic, technological and typological analyses of the lithic industry and faunal remains excavated at the Victoria Cabrera Site (VCS) during the 2017 fieldwork season. The stratigraphic sequence of the site contains several levels of fluvial origin, some of them with lithic and faunal remains. Most remains (lithics and bones) are affected by rounding processes. Infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating has provided ages between 90 and 70 ka BP for these layers that can be related to the Marine Isotope Stage 5a. Lithics are scarce and the dominant raw materials are Naibor Soit quarzite and basalt, followed by phonolite, chert and quartz as the most common raw materials. The lithic technology is based on the production of flakes obtained from prepared cores, with the discoid method and, to a lesser extent the Levallois method being the most frequently used. The retouched blanks are described as “substratum” or “domestic” tools (sidescrapers, notches or denticulates). There is just one heavy duty piece and points are absent. The faunal assemblage includes Alcelaphinae, Antilopinae and Equidae. The major parts of the unidentified faunal remains are size 3 ungulates, followed by carcasses of size 2 and size 4 species. We cannot relate lithic and bones because no cut marks or percussion marks have been identified and carnivore action is scarce. In sum, VCS represents the first accurately dated Middle Stone Age site, with lithic and faunal remains in Olduvai Gorge., Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO)/FEDER, Fundación PALARQ, Instituto de Patrimonio Cultural de España, Depto. de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Fac. de Ciencias Geológicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2019
40. The oldest managed aquifer recharge system in Europe: New insights from the Espino recharge channel (Sierra Nevada, southern Spain)
- Author
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Martos Rosillo, Sergio, Ruíz Constán, Ana, González Ramón, Antonio, Mediavilla López, Rosa María, Martín Civantos, Juan Manuel, Martínez Moreno, Francisco José, Jódar, Jorge, Marín Lechado, Carlos, Medialdea, Alicia, Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús, Pedrera, Antonio, Durán, Juan José, Martos Rosillo, Sergio, Ruíz Constán, Ana, González Ramón, Antonio, Mediavilla López, Rosa María, Martín Civantos, Juan Manuel, Martínez Moreno, Francisco José, Jódar, Jorge, Marín Lechado, Carlos, Medialdea, Alicia, Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús, Pedrera, Antonio, and Durán, Juan José
- Abstract
In Sierra Nevada (southern Spain), the highest mountain range in southern Europe, the application of an ancestral Integrated Water Resources Management system (IWRM), based on the conjunctive use of groundwater and surface water, provides water resources for irrigation and supply in the driest months of the year in this semiarid mountain region. Meltwater is derived from the headwaters of the mountain streams and rivers through a set of uncoated channels excavated in the ground (locally known as acequias de careo) to infiltrate at the upper part of the valleys. Water infiltrated along the acequias de careo slowly flows down the hillsides, through the weathered zone of the hard rock aquifer and the glacial and periglacial sediments. The recharge accomplished through this Managed Aquifer Recharge technique (MAR) activates numerous springs located halfway down the hillside and increases the base flow of the rivers. In this study, focused on a careo channel located on the southern slope of Sierra Nevada called Acequia de El Espino, different archaeological, sedimentological, geophysical and hydrogeological techniques are applied to determine the age and the efficiency of this ancestral example of a MAR and IWRM system. Results suggest that the acequias de careo may be the oldest MAR system in Europe, and that this MAR technique could be applied in other high mountain alpine watersheds to mitigate the effects of climate change., Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Junta de Andalucia, Depto. de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Fac. de Ciencias Geológicas, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2019
41. First chronostratigraphic framework of fluvial terrace systems in the eastern Cantabrian margin (Bay of Biscay, Spain)
- Author
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del Val, Miren, Duval, Mathieu, Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Moreno, Davinia, Arriolabengoa, Martin, Aranburu, Arantza, Iriarte, Eneko, del Val, Miren, Duval, Mathieu, Medialdea, Alicia, Bateman, Mark D., Moreno, Davinia, Arriolabengoa, Martin, Aranburu, Arantza, and Iriarte, Eneko
- Abstract
Reported here is the first chronostratigraphic study of the Quaternary fluvial terrace deposits of three different valleys (Deba, Nerbioi, Oiartzun) located in the eastern Cantabrian margin (northern Spain), designed to understand long-term fluvial dynamics of this region. Fourteen samples were collected for numerical dating purpose, in the lowest terrace levels from 5 m to 63 m above current river channel. Optically Stimulated Luminescence dating was performed using the SAR protocol. For samples from terraces > 20 m above the current river channel, over 20% of measured aliquots were above saturation of the OSL signal. Consequently, only minimum ages could be estimated. Five samples also underwent Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dating following the Multiple Centre approach. The ESR signals of the Aluminium and Titanium (Ti -Li and Ti -H) centres were systematically measured in each sample. In particular, the ESR signal of the Ti -H centre was strong enough to derive reliable and meaningful dose estimates. Obtained age results range between similar to 140 and similar to 400 ka for the terrace levels from + 10 to + 25 m. They suggest phases of aggradation during MIS 6, MIS 8 and MIS 10, for terrace levels T + 10m, T + 20m and T + 25m, respectively.
- Published
- 2019
42. The mixed-bed glacial landform imprint of the North Sea Lobe in the western North Sea
- Author
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Roberts, David H., Grimoldi, Elena, Callard, Louise, Evans, David J. A., Clark, Chris D., Stewart, Heather A., Dove, Dayton, Saher, Margot, Cofaigh, Colm O., Chiverrell, Richard C., Bateman, Mark D., Moreton, Steven G., Bradwell, Tom, Fabel, Derek, Medialdea, Alicia, Roberts, David H., Grimoldi, Elena, Callard, Louise, Evans, David J. A., Clark, Chris D., Stewart, Heather A., Dove, Dayton, Saher, Margot, Cofaigh, Colm O., Chiverrell, Richard C., Bateman, Mark D., Moreton, Steven G., Bradwell, Tom, Fabel, Derek, and Medialdea, Alicia
- Abstract
During the last glacial cycle an intriguing feature of the British-Irish Ice Sheet was the North Sea Lobe (NSL); fed from the Firth of Forth and which flowed south and parallel to the English east coast. The controls on the formation and behaviour of the NSL have long been debated, but in the southern North Sea recent work suggests the NSL formed a dynamic, oscillating terrestrial margin operating over a deforming bed. Further north, however, little is known of the behaviour of the NSL or under what conditions it operated. This paper analyses new acoustic, sedimentary and geomorphic data in order to evaluate the glacial landsystem imprint and deglacial history of the NSL offshore from NE England. Subglacial tills (AF2/3) form a discontinuous mosaic interspersed with bedrock outcrops across the seafloor, with the partial excavation and advection of subglacial sediment during both advance and retreat producing mega-scale glacial lineations and grounding zone wedges. The resultant 'mixed-bed' glacial landsystem is the product of a dynamic switch from a terrestrial piedmont-lobe margin with a net surplus of sediment to a partially erosive, quasi-stable, marine-terminating, ice stream lobe as the NSL withdrew northwards. Glaciomarine sediments (AF4) drape the underlying subglacial mixed-bed imprint and point to a switch to tidewater conditions between 19.9 and 16.5 ka cal BP as the North Sea became inundated. The dominant controls on NSL recession during this period were changing ice flux through the Firth of Forth ice stream onset zone and water depths at the grounding line; the development of the mixed-bed landsystem being a response to grounding line instability. (c) 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2019
43. Glacial lake evolution and Atlantic-Pacific drainage reversals during deglaciation of the Patagonian Ice Sheet
- Author
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Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Bendle, Jacob M., Benito, Gerardo, Davies, Bethan J., Sancho, Carlos, Palmer, Adrian P., Fabel, Derek, Medialdea, Alicia, Martin, Julian R. V., Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Bendle, Jacob M., Benito, Gerardo, Davies, Bethan J., Sancho, Carlos, Palmer, Adrian P., Fabel, Derek, Medialdea, Alicia, and Martin, Julian R. V.
- Abstract
Modelling experiments of drainage events from proglacial lakes of the Rio Baker catchment (central Patagonia, 46-48 degrees S) indicate that Atlantic-Pacific drainage reversals may have caused freshwater forcing of regional climate. However, much of the region remains unmapped in detail and available geochronological data is equivocal, leading to multiple published palaeolake evolution models. We evaluate these models through new geomorphological mapping from the Baker valley; cosmogenic dating of moraine boulders that demonstrates an Antarctic Cold Reversal ice readvance that blocked drainage through the Rio Baker; an altitudinal-based review of published geochronology; and regional analysis of shoreline glacio-isostasy and palaeolake levels. We use these datasets to present a new regional palaeolake evolution model underpinned by Bayesian age modelling. We demonstrate that 10(3) km(3) of freshwater was released to the Pacific over at least 6 drainage events from before 15.3-15.0 cal yr BP to the early Holocene. The final stages of lake drainage involved catastrophic flooding along the Baker valley, evidenced by high magnitude flood landforms such as boulder bars, likely caused by failure of large valley floor moraine dams. We place these drainage events in the context of Late Quaternary meltwater pathways associated with advance/retreat of the Patagonian Ice Sheet and early human occupation across the region. Although broad patterns of ice retreat and lake formation may be similar across Patagonia, driven by Southern Hemisphere palaeoclimate, regional topographic settings likely resulted in spatial and temporal heterogeneity of Atlantic-Pacific drainage reorganisation across southernmost South America. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2019
44. Role of transverse structures in paleoseismicity and drainage rearrangement in rift systems: the case of the Valdecebro fault zone (Teruel graben, eastern Spain)
- Author
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Simon, Jose L., Ezquerro, Lope, Arlegui, Luis E., Liesa, Carlos L., Luzon, Aranzazu, Medialdea, Alicia, Garcia, Alberto, Zarazaga, Daniel, Simon, Jose L., Ezquerro, Lope, Arlegui, Luis E., Liesa, Carlos L., Luzon, Aranzazu, Medialdea, Alicia, Garcia, Alberto, and Zarazaga, Daniel
- Abstract
The E-W trending, nearly pure extensional Valdecebro fault zone is a transverse structure at the central sector of the N-S Teruel graben. It was activated by the Late Ruscinian (Early Pliocene, ca. 3.7Ma), giving rise to structural rearrangement of the graben margin. Until the Late Pleistocene, it has accommodated a net slip ca. 205m, with slip rate of 0.055mm/a. Paleoseismicity has been analysed in a 29-m-long, 5-m-deep trench excavated through a fault branch that offsets a Pleistocene pediment surface. The paleoseismic succession includes a minimum of 6-7 events occurred since ca. 142ka BP, although a model with 12 events could be more realistic. The following paleoseismic parameters have been inferred, assuming a minimum of 6 and a maximum of 12 events: average coseismic slip=58-117cm; recurrence period=8.4-28.4ka; potential moment magnitude M-w=5.8-5.9. The recorded displacement since ca. 142ka BP totalizes 7.0m, with slip rate of 0.05-0.07mm/a. Slip on the transverse Valdecebro fault zone has critically contributed to bulk deformation under a prevailing multidirectional' extensional regime. Drainage patterns have been rearranged, recurrently switching between westward and southward directions as a consequence of diverse slip episodes at the Valdecebro fault zone (E-W) and the neighbouring La Hita (N-S) and Concud (NW-SE) faults. The ultimate westward drainage of the Valdecebro depression incised and dismantled a southward-sloping Pleistocene pediment sourced at the Valdecebro mountain front, representing a capture by the Alfambra river occurred between 124 and 22ka BP.
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- 2019
45. A chronology for North Sea Lobe advance and recession on the Lincolnshire and Norfolk coasts during MIS 2 and 6
- Author
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Evans, David J. A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Ely, Jeremy, Medialdea, Alicia, Burke, Matthew J., Chiverrell, Richard C., Clark, Chris D., Fabel, Derek, Evans, David J. A., Roberts, David H., Bateman, Mark D., Ely, Jeremy, Medialdea, Alicia, Burke, Matthew J., Chiverrell, Richard C., Clark, Chris D., and Fabel, Derek
- Abstract
During the last (MIS 2) and older glaciations of the North Sea, a North Sea Lobe (NSL) of the British-Irish Ice Sheet flowed onshore and terminated on the lowlands of eastern England, constructing inset sequences of either substantial ice-marginal deposits and tills or only a thin till veneer, indicative of complex and highly dynamic glaciological behaviour. The glaciation limit represented by the Marsh Tills and the Stickney and Horkstow Moraines in Lincolnshire is regarded as the maximum margin of the NSL during MIS 2 and was attained at similar to 19.5 ka as determined by OSL dating of overridden lake sediments at Welton le Wold. A later ice marginal position is recorded by the Hogsthorpe-Killingholme Moraine belt, within which ice-walled lake plains indicate large scale ice stagnation rapidly followed ice advance at similar to 18.4 ka based on dates from supraglacial lake deposits. The NSL advanced onshore in North Norfolk slightly earlier constructing a moraine ridge at Garrett Hill at similar to 21.5ka. In addition to the large ice-dammed lakes in the Humber and Wash lowlands, we propose that an extensive Glacial Lake Lymn was dammed in the southern Lincolnshire Wolds by the NSL ice margin at the Stickney Moraine. Previous proposals that older glacier limits might be recorded in the region, lying between MIS 2 and MIS 12 deposits, are verified by our OSL dates on the Stiffkey moraine, which lies immediately outside the Garrett Hill moraine and appears to be of MIS 6 age. (C) 2018 The Geologists' Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2019
46. Victoria Cabrera Site: A Middle Stone Age site at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania
- Author
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Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Marín, Juan, Solano-Megías, Irene, Uribelarrea, David, Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Aramendi, Julia, Medialdea, Alicia, Arteaga, Carlos, Pernas-Hernández, Marta, Gidna, Agnes, Neogi, Sanghamitra, Baudot, Eva, Narváez, Carlos, Mabulla, Audax, Maíllo-Fernández, José Manuel, Marín, Juan, Solano-Megías, Irene, Uribelarrea, David, Martín-Perea, David Manuel, Aramendi, Julia, Medialdea, Alicia, Arteaga, Carlos, Pernas-Hernández, Marta, Gidna, Agnes, Neogi, Sanghamitra, Baudot, Eva, Narváez, Carlos, and Mabulla, Audax
- Abstract
Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) is a key site for the study and comprehension of human evolution in East Africa. However, the origin of Homo sapiens and the Middle Stone Age have been poorly understood in the Gorge thus far. In this study, we present the dating, taphonomic, technological and typological analyses of the lithic industry and faunal remains excavated at the Victoria Cabrera Site (VCS) during the 2017 fieldwork season. The stratigraphic sequence of the site contains several levels of fluvial origin, some of them with lithic and faunal remains. Most remains (lithics and bones) are affected by rounding processes. Infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating has provided ages between 90 and 70 ka BP for these layers that can be related to the Marine Isotope Stage 5a. Lithics are scarce and the dominant raw materials are Naibor Soit quarzite and basalt, followed by phonolite, chert and quartz as the most common raw materials. The lithic technology is based on the production of flakes obtained from prepared cores, with the discoid method and, to a lesser extent the Levallois method being the most frequently used. The retouched blanks are described as “substratum” or “domestic” tools (sidescrapers, notches or denticulates). There is just one heavy duty piece and points are absent. The faunal assemblage includes Alcelaphinae, Antilopinae and Equidae. The major parts of the unidentified faunal remains are size 3 ungulates, followed by carcasses of size 2 and size 4 species. We cannot relate lithic and bones because no cut marks or percussion marks have been identified and carnivore action is scarce. In sum, VCS represents the first accurately dated Middle Stone Age site, with lithic and faunal remains in Olduvai Gorge.
- Published
- 2019
47. Glacial lake evolution and Atlantic-Pacific drainage reversals during deglaciation of the Patagonian Ice Sheet
- Author
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University of London, British Society for Geomorphology, Natural Environment Research Council (UK), Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Bendle, Jacob M., Benito, Gerardo, Davies, Bethan J., Sancho, Carlos, Palmer, Adrián P., Fabel, Derek, Medialdea, Alicia, Martín, Julián R.V., University of London, British Society for Geomorphology, Natural Environment Research Council (UK), Thorndycraft, Varyl R., Bendle, Jacob M., Benito, Gerardo, Davies, Bethan J., Sancho, Carlos, Palmer, Adrián P., Fabel, Derek, Medialdea, Alicia, and Martín, Julián R.V.
- Abstract
Modelling experiments of drainage events from proglacial lakes of the Río Baker catchment (central Patagonia, 46–48 ⁰S) indicate that Atlantic-Pacific drainage reversals may have caused freshwater forcing of regional climate. However, much of the region remains unmapped in detail and available geochronological data is equivocal, leading to multiple published palaeolake evolution models. We evaluate these models through new geomorphological mapping from the Baker valley; cosmogenic dating of moraine boulders that demonstrates an Antarctic Cold Reversal ice readvance that blocked drainage through the Río Baker; an altitudinal-based review of published geochronology; and regional analysis of shoreline glacio-isostasy and palaeolake levels. We use these datasets to present a new regional palaeolake evolution model underpinned by Bayesian age modelling. We demonstrate that 10 km of freshwater was released to the Pacific over at least 6 drainage events from before 15.3–15.0 cal yr BP to the early Holocene. The final stages of lake drainage involved catastrophic flooding along the Baker valley, evidenced by high magnitude flood landforms such as boulder bars, likely caused by failure of large valley floor moraine dams. We place these drainage events in the context of Late Quaternary meltwater pathways associated with advance/retreat of the Patagonian Ice Sheet and early human occupation across the region. Although broad patterns of ice retreat and lake formation may be similar across Patagonia, driven by Southern Hemisphere palaeoclimate, regional topographic settings likely resulted in spatial and temporal heterogeneity of Atlantic-Pacific drainage reorganisation across southernmost South America.
- Published
- 2019
48. The oldest managed aquifer recharge system in Europe: New insights from the Espino recharge channel (Sierra Nevada, southern Spain)
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Junta de Andalucía, European Commission, Martos Rosillo, Sergio, Ruiz Constán, Ana, González Ramón, Antonio, Mediavilla, Rosa, Martín Civantos, José María, Martínez-Moreno, Francisco José, Jódar, Jorge, Marín-Lechado, Carlos, Medialdea, Alicia, Galindo-Zaldívar, Jesús, Pedrera Parias, Antonio, Durán Valsero, Juan José, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Junta de Andalucía, European Commission, Martos Rosillo, Sergio, Ruiz Constán, Ana, González Ramón, Antonio, Mediavilla, Rosa, Martín Civantos, José María, Martínez-Moreno, Francisco José, Jódar, Jorge, Marín-Lechado, Carlos, Medialdea, Alicia, Galindo-Zaldívar, Jesús, Pedrera Parias, Antonio, and Durán Valsero, Juan José
- Abstract
In Sierra Nevada (southern Spain), the highest mountain range in southern Europe, the application of an ancestral Integrated Water Resources Management system (IWRM), based on the conjunctive use of groundwater and surface water, provides water resources for irrigation and supply in the driest months of the year in this semiarid mountain region. Meltwater is derived from the headwaters of the mountain streams and rivers through a set of uncoated channels excavated in the ground (locally known as acequias de careo) to infiltrate at the upper part of the valleys. Water infiltrated along the acequias de careo slowly flows down the hillsides, through the weathered zone of the hard rock aquifer and the glacial and periglacial sediments. The recharge accomplished through this Managed Aquifer Recharge technique (MAR) activates numerous springs located halfway down the hillside and increases the base flow of the rivers. In this study, focused on a careo channel located on the southern slope of Sierra Nevada called Acequia de El Espino, different archaeological, sedimentological, geophysical and hydrogeological techniques are applied to determine the age and the efficiency of this ancestral example of a MAR and IWRM system. Results suggest that the acequias de careo may be the oldest MAR system in Europe, and that this MAR technique could be applied in other high mountain alpine watersheds to mitigate the effects of climate change.
- Published
- 2019
49. Paleoflood hydrology and related environmental changes of a mediterranean rambla (Castellón, NE Spain)
- Author
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Machado, María José, Medialdea, Alicia, Rico, María Teresa, Sánchez Moya, Yolanda, Sopeña, Alfonso, and Benito, Gerardo
- Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el 5th PAGES Open Science Meeting, celebrado en Zaragoza (España), del 9 al 13 de mayo de 2017, Rambla de la Viuda (drainage area of 1500 km2 ) is a Mediterranean ephemeral river with a hydrological regime characterised by large floods. The region has a long history of anthropogenic land-use changes, which contributed to temporal phases of increased rates of sediment yield and changes in flood hydrology. Valley sides revealed important accumulations of slackwater flood deposits. These slackwater flood deposits emplaced by high stage floodwaters show a complete stratigraphy from which we can reconstruct long-term records of floods and environmental changes. Interbeded with these flood units, colluvial units can be observed, and several edaphic horizons developed on colluvial and fluvial deposits were identified. The alluvial and colluvial chronostratigraphical, sedimentological and palaeobotanical (phytoliths) analysis of these units, together with the hydraulic flood modelling approach, made possible to determine: a) the way in which hydrological extreme events may be changing both in frequency and intensity as a result of climate variability, b) the weight of human influence (land-use) on soil hydrology, c) geomorphic channel changes, and c) human/climatic induced changes on landcover during this temporal scale (last 500 yrs).
- Published
- 2017
50. Neanderthal settlement in central Iberia: Geo-archaeological research in the Abrigo del Molino site, MIS 3 (Segovia, Iberian Peninsula)
- Author
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Alvarez-Alonso, David, de Andres-Herrero, Maria, Diez-Herrero, Andres, Medialdea, Alicia, Rojo-Hernandez, Julio, Alvarez-Alonso, David, de Andres-Herrero, Maria, Diez-Herrero, Andres, Medialdea, Alicia, and Rojo-Hernandez, Julio
- Abstract
The Abrigo del Molino archaeological site is located in the valley of the Eresma river, near Segovia in central Spain. It consists of a shallow cave of fluvio-karstic origin, which has been completely filled with detrital deposits. Geo-archaeological interpretation of the genesis of these deposits differentiates three groups: a lower group with sandy loams and fine sands interbedded with pebble and gravel layers, deposited respectively by palaeofloods and slope contributions; a middle group with massive silt and grain-supported boulders, formed by alternating contributions from the overlying slope, karst mudflows and rockfalls from the shelter roof; and an upper group of silt cemented by carbonates, final backfill alteration and degradation of the host rock. The techno-typological characteristics of the lithic assemblage confirm the existence of Mousterian levels at the site, and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of these levels obtains an age range of 31-60 ka for the detrital deposits, presenting the occupation by Neanderthal groups for the first time in karstic environments in the northern Iberian plateau, the southern part of the Duero basin. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2018
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