Hydrogeomorphic processes affecting riparian habitat within alluvial channel-floodplain river systems: a review for the temperate zone

2005 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 719-737 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Steiger ◽  
E. Tabacchi ◽  
S. Dufour ◽  
D. Corenblit ◽  
J.-L. Peiry
2021 ◽  
Vol 286 ◽  
pp. 112213
Author(s):  
Luke M. Mosley ◽  
Todd Wallace ◽  
Joel Rahman ◽  
Tom Roberts ◽  
Matt Gibbs

Hydrobiologia ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 795 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larissa Strictar Pereira ◽  
Luiz Fernando Caserta Tencatt ◽  
Rosa Maria Dias ◽  
Anielly Galego de Oliveira ◽  
Angelo Antonio Agostinho

2017 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Rógenes Monteiro Pontes ◽  
Fernando Mainardi Fan ◽  
Ayan Santos Fleischmann ◽  
Rodrigo Cauduro Dias de Paiva ◽  
Diogo Costa Buarque ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 655-668
Author(s):  
N. Lenhardt ◽  
W. Altermann ◽  
F. Humbert ◽  
M. de Kock

Abstract The Palaeoproterozoic Hekpoort Formation of the Pretoria Group is a lava-dominated unit that has a basin-wide extent throughout the Transvaal sub-basin of South Africa. Additional correlative units may be present in the Kanye sub-basin of Botswana. The key characteristic of the formation is its general geochemical uniformity. Volcaniclastic and other sedimentary rocks are relatively rare throughout the succession but may be dominant in some locations. Hekpoort Formation outcrops are sporadic throughout the basin and mostly occur in the form of gentle hills and valleys, mainly encircling Archaean domes and the Palaeoproterozoic Bushveld Complex (BC). The unit is exposed in the western Pretoria Group basin, sitting unconformably either on the Timeball Hill Formation or Boshoek Formation, which is lenticular there, and on top of the Boshoek Formation in the east of the basin. The unit is unconformably overlain by the Dwaalheuwel Formation. The type-locality for the Hekpoort Formation is the Hekpoort farm (504 IQ Hekpoort), ca. 60 km to the west-southwest of Pretoria. However, no stratotype has ever been proposed. A lectostratotype, i.e., the Mooikloof area in Pretoria East, that can be enhanced by two reference stratotypes are proposed herein. The Hekpoort Formation was deposited in a cratonic subaerial setting, forming a large igneous province (LIP) in which short-termed localised ponds and small braided river systems existed. It therefore forms one of the major Palaeoproterozoic magmatic events on the Kaapvaal Craton.


The Scottish Caledonides have grown by the accretion of terranes generated somewhere along the Laurentian margin. By the time these terranes had been emplaced along the Scottish sector, they were structurally truncated then reassembled to form an incomplete collage of indirectly related tectonic elements of a destructive margin. The basement to some of these tectonic elements and the basement blocks belonging to the previously accreted Precambrian are of uncertain provenance and a source in the Pan-African craton is possible. As terranes migrate along the orogen they generate in the fault zones and on their periphery a reservoir of mature sediment. This mature sediment is produced because of the recycling produced during the generation and destruction of sedimentary basins developing during terrane translation. At each period of recycling the mature sediments are mixed with less mature sediments yielded from local uplifts generated by the new basin formation. If a large part of the orogen suffers orthogonal closure, giant river systems may form and disperse sediment across terranes. This is likely to have happened during the Devonian-Carboniferous of parts of N. Europe.


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