High-resolution seismic imaging reveals infill history of a submerged Quaternary fjord system in the subantarctic Auckland Islands, New Zealand

2019 ◽  
Vol 93 ◽  
pp. 255-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward J. Perkins ◽  
Andrew R. Gorman ◽  
Emily J. Tidey ◽  
Gary S. Wilson ◽  
Christian Ohneiser ◽  
...  

AbstractQuaternary processes and environmental changes are often difficult to assess in remote subantarctic islands due to high surface erosion rates and overprinting of sedimentary products in locations that can be a challenge to access. We present a set of high-resolution, multichannel seismic lines and complementary multibeam bathymetry collected off the eastern (leeward) side of the subantarctic Auckland Islands, about 465 km south of New Zealand's South Island. These data constrain the erosive and depositional history of the island group, and they reveal an extensive system of sediment-filled valleys that extend offshore to depths that exceed glacial low-stand sea level. Although shallow, marine, U-shaped valleys and moraines are imaged, the rugged offshore geomorphology of the paleovalley floors and the stratigraphy of infill sediments suggests that the valley floors were shaped by submarine fluvial erosion, and subsequently filled by lacustrine, fjord, and fluvial sedimentary processes.

The Holocene ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (12) ◽  
pp. 1928-1947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magdalena Wieckowska-Lüth ◽  
Wiebke Kirleis ◽  
Walter Doerfler

A high-resolution multi-proxy record from sediments of a small-sized lake situated in Telemark, southeastern Norway, was used to reconstruct the local landscape development of the past c. 10,500 years. Our data demonstrate that changes in vegetation composition and structure in the first two-thirds of the Holocene are principally attributable to climatic changes and high erosion rates, as deduced from geochemical and physical (loss-on-ignition) proxy analyses. The highest signals of erosional inputs to the lake (c. 8030–5760 cal. BP) can be correlated with the first part of the Holocene Thermal Maximum. Nevertheless, evidence from pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs and microscopic charcoal analyses indicates the presence of nutrient-rich and disturbed environments already during the middle Mesolithic (c. 10,050–9400 cal. BP). It also shows traces of animal husbandry (c. 5580 cal. BP) and small-scale cereal cultivation (c. 5520 cal. BP) in the early Neolithic. In subsequent periods, human impact remains at a relatively low level and does not generate significant palaeo-environmental changes. Not until the second half of the Bronze Age (c. 2840 cal. BP) is some intensification in animal husbandry recorded, whereas crop cultivation continues to play a minor role in the second millennium BP. The establishment of a full farming economy took place during the Roman Iron Age (c. 1790 cal. BP), characterised by extensive forest clearance and local fires, crop cultivation in permanent fields and the presence of open pastures. This establishment is associated with advanced soil degeneration and increased erosion rates.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jörg Robl ◽  
Stefan Hergarten

<p>The majority of the highest mountain peaks on Earth is located at the dissected rim of large orogenic plateaus such as the Tibetan Plateau or the Altiplano. The striking spatial coexistence of deep, incised valleys and extraordinary high peaks located at the interfluves led to the idea of a common formation even a hundred years ago: focused erosion in valleys triggers the rise of mountain peaks due to erosional unloading and isostatically driven uplift. Ridgelines rise at the interfluves parallel to major rivers, but an additional ridgeline forms perpendicular to the principal flow direction separating the dissected rim from the undissected center of the plateau. As major rivers originate within the plateau and bypass the highest peaks, the latter rigdeline does not form a principal drainage divide. However, it forms a strong orographic barrier with wet conditions at the windward and dry conditions towards the plateau center at the leeward side. The height of the ridgeline is controlled by valley incision via erosional unloading and isostatic uplift.  If the precipitation pattern responsible for localized valley incision is controlled by the geometry of orographic barriers, a series of complex feedbacks between precipitation, erosion and ridgeline uplift (including the evolution of the highest peaks) occurs.</p><p>In this study, we present first results of a novel numerical model, which couples (a) fluvial erosion based on the stream power law, (b) flexural isostasy including viscous relaxation and (c) orographic precipitation based on the advection and diffusion of moisture and its reaction on topographic barriers. Originating from a simple model setup with a plateau in the center of the model domain and moisture transported along a predominant wind direction, we explore the co-formation of valleys and the rise of ridgelines including the growth of extraordinary high peaks. As the evolving topography controls the precipitation pattern, erosion rates are high at the wet windward side of the ridgeline, which parallels the plateau rim, while the leeward side towards the plateau center is characterized by low precipitation and very low erosion rates. As it prevents elevated low-relief areas from dissection, we suggest that this mechanism is a principal cause for the longevity of orogenic plateaus.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aihemaiti Maitituerdi ◽  
Maarten Van Daele ◽  
Dirk Verschuren ◽  
Marc De Batist ◽  
Nicolas Waldmann

<p>Sediments deposited in Lake Chala constitute a high-resolution archive of past climate and environmental change in equatorial East Africa spanning two glacial-interglacial cycles. To correctly interpret the proxy records it contains, it is crucial to understand the evolution of lacustrine sedimentation in this volcanic crater basin since its formation on the lower south-eastern slope of Mt. Kilimanjaro. A dense grid of 37 km high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles allowed the reconstruction of the depositional history of Lake Chala. The seismic-stratigraphic sequence comprises sixteen distinct and finely-stratified units (U1-U16, youngest to oldest), grouped into five major depositional stages. Depositional stage I (U16, ~243-198 ka) marks the initiation of sedimentation in the originally ring-shaped depositional area surrounding two central tuff cones emerging from the basin floor and is characterized by a high rate of sediment accumulation and frequent occurrence of mass-wasting events (MWEs) under conditions of a relatively low lake-surface level compared to today. Depositional stage II (U15-U12, ~198-114 ka) represents the onset of basin-wide sedimentation above the central tuff cones, implying a higher position of the lake surface, less sediment focusing, and a shift to more strictly hemipelagic sedimentation. Multiple large-scale slope failures occurred around the basin periphery accompanying the progressive rise in lake level. Depositional stage III (U11-U8, ~114-97 ka) represents the development of a relatively flat lake floor under a significantly lower lake level, with evidence for strong sediment focusing implying accelerated sediment accumulation in central bottom areas. Depositional stage IV (U7-U4, ~97-20 ka) is again characterized by largely undisturbed hemipelagic sedimentation under mostly high lake-level conditions. However, frequent occurrence of mass-wasting events (MWEs) after ~48 ka resulted in the development of a longer, more gentle bottom slope towards the basin center. Depositional Stage V (U3-U1, ~20 ka BP to Present) represents the most recent period of basin evolution, during which the frequent occurrence of basin-focused sedimentation under a fluctuating lake surface level contributed to the establishment of the present-day very broad and flat basin floor of Lake Chala. Extrapolation of sedimentation rates established for the uppermost part of the sediment sequence, supplemented with basin-morphometric inferences derived from the successive depositional stages, yields an estimated age of ~243 ka for the oldest sediments in Lake Chala.</p>


Author(s):  
Caitlin E. Leslie ◽  
◽  
Ross Secord ◽  
Daniel J. Peppe ◽  
Stacy Atchley ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Pitts ◽  
◽  
Achim D. Herrmann ◽  
John T. Haynes ◽  
Gabriele Giuli ◽  
...  

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