The Amspoort Silts, northem Namib desert (Namibia):: formation, age and palaeoclimatic evidence of river-end deposits

被引:31
作者
Eitel, B
Kadereit, A
Blümel, WD
Hüser, K
Kromer, B
机构
[1] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Geog, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany
[2] Max Planck Inst Kernphys, Forsch Stelle Archaometrie, Heidelberger Akad Wissensch, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany
[3] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Geog, D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany
[4] Univ Bayreuth, Dept Geosci, D-95447 Bayreuth, Germany
[5] Heidelberg Univ, Forsch Stelle Radiometrie, Heidelberger Akad Wissensch, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany
关键词
Namibia; Amspoort Silts; river-end deposits; little ice age; luminescence dating; radiocarbon dating;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2004.07.006
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Detailed geomorphological and chronological investigations of the NW-Namibian Amspoort Silt formation show that the sediments are typical river-end deposits. This type of endoreic sediment. occuring only in desert margin areas, provides valuable information about the palaeo-environment. In the Hoanib valley. the fine-grained deposits have buried riverine trees. Radiocarbon dating of the wood and luminescence dating of the sediments allow a detailed reconstruction of the aggradation processes. Accumulation started similar to10 km downstream of Amspoort around the beginning of the 15th century and ended in the 19th century, some kilometres upstream of Amspoort. This upstream shift of sedimentation during the Little fee Age was caused by gradually decreasing runoff resulting from aridification of the upper part of the Hoanib river catchment lying east of the Namib desert margin greater than or equal to1.200 m a.s.l. The Amspoort Silt terrace is evidence of palaeo-hydrological fluctuations in NW-Namibia. At present, the Hoanib river erodes deeply into the silty deposits, indicating that NW-Namibia receives more monsoonal rainfall today than during the Little Ice Age. However, this contradicts the hypothesis of a (continual) natural aridification of NW-Namibia (Damaraland, Kaokoveld) since the mid-19th century in the course of global climatic change. Rather. deposition and erosion of the Amspoort Silts indicate that landscape degradation in NW-Namibia is primarily anthropogenically induced and most probably not accelerated by a decrease in precipitation. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 314
页数:16
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]  
Blumel W.D., 2000, REGENSBURGER GEOGRAP, V33, P37
[2]  
BOENIGK W., 1983, SCHWERMINERALANALYSE
[3]   Luminescence techniques: Instrumentation and methods [J].
Botter-Jensen, L .
RADIATION MEASUREMENTS, 1997, 27 (5-6) :749-768
[4]  
Bradley RS, 2003, GLO CH IGBP, P105
[5]  
BRUNOTTE E, 2002, ERDE, V133, P133
[6]   IRSL dating of sands: Bleaching characteristics at deposition inferred from the use of single aliquots [J].
Clarke, ML .
RADIATION MEASUREMENTS, 1996, 26 (04) :611-620
[7]   Holocene environmental change in the Otjiwarongo thornbush savanna (Northern Namibia): evidence from soils and sediments [J].
Eitel, B ;
Eberle, J ;
Kuhn, R .
CATENA, 2002, 47 (01) :43-62
[8]  
Eitel B., 1993, Erde, V124, P85
[9]   Dust and loessic alluvial deposits in Northwestern Namibia (Damaraland, Kaokoveld):: sedimentology and palaeoclimatic evidence based on luminescence data [J].
Eitel, B ;
Blümel, WD ;
Hüser, K ;
Mauz, B .
QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2001, 76-7 :57-65
[10]  
EITEL B, 1994, STUTTGARTER GEOGRAPH, V123