Evidence for dune reactivation from GPR profiles on the Maputaland coastal plain, South Africa

Author:

Botha Greg A.1,Bristow Charlie S.2,Porat Naomi3,Duller Geoff4,Armitage Simon J.4,Roberts Helen M.4,Clarke Brendan M.1,Kota Mxolisi W.1,Schoeman Philo1

Affiliation:

1. Council for Geoscience, KwaZulu-Natal Unit P.O. Box 900, Pietermaritzburg, 3200, South Africa gabotha@mweb.co.za

2. School of Earth Science, Birkbeck, University of London Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX, UK

3. Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhe Israel Street, Jerusalem, Israel

4. Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Wales Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 3DB, Wales, UK

Abstract

AbstractThe Maputaland area of northeastern South Africa is characterized by extensive dunefields which developed during polyphase reworking of regional aeolian cover sand from the Mid-Pleistocene to the Holocene. Extended parabolic dunes, many preserved only as wind-rift trailing limbs, as well as areas of sinuous crested dunes, hummocky dune systems and the high, composite, accretionary coastal barrier dune cordon are the dominant dune forms. There are few natural sections exposing the stratigraphic succession and unequivocal relative age relationships between dune systems are uncommon. A ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey of dunes and representative aeolian sand stratigraphic units was undertaken in order to investigate the internal structure of the different dune forms and identify stratigraphic relationships between buried sedimentary units. The GPR profiles revealed that the trailing limbs of almost all the parabolic dunes that were surveyed comprise stacked sand units, separated by low-angle reflections interpreted as bounding surfaces, which accumulated through polyphase vertical accretion. Most extended parabolic dunes are aligned north-south and the upper parts of the dunes are characterized by inclined reflections in GPR profile interpreted as large-scale sets of cross-stratification with apparent dips toward the west. A hummocky dune revealed cross-stratified aeolian sand superimposed on a truncated dune form and probably formed through deflation of pre-existing dunes. Using 100 MHz and 200 MHz antennae, it is clear that GPR is capable of imaging very fine sedimentary structures and buried erosional surfaces in the homogeneous aeolian sand of Maputaland. At some of the sites investigated, the buried sand units identified were sampled by hand-augering for infrared-stimulated luminescence dating. The age determinations on these samples suggest that vertical accretion of up to 7 m of sand occurred intermittently over variable time scales up to 25 000 years on some parabolic dune limbs during the Late Pleistocene. In some complex dunefields, adjacent dunes were mobilized at different times, suggesting that remobilization was localized. The implications of the complex internal structure and vertical accretion of extended parabolic dunes are discussed in the context of changes in vegetation cover and water table due to seasonal and short-term cyclical climate variations as well as long-term climate change patterns during the last glacial cycle and the Holocene.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference36 articles.

1. Anderson W. (1901) First Report on the Geological Survey of Natal and Zululand, Surveyor General’s Department, P. Davis and Sons, Pietermaritzburg. 138.

2. Anderson W. (1904) Second Report on the Geological Survey of Natal and Zululand, Surveyor General’s Department, West, Newman and Co., London. 146.

3. Botha G. A. (1997a) in Maputaland: Focus on the Quaternary Evolution of the South-East African Coastal Plain, Field Guide and Abstracts, The Maputaland group: A provisional lithostratigraphy for coastal KwaZulu-Natal, INQUA Commission on Quaternary Shorelines, Africa Subcommission, ed Botha G. A. pp 21–26.

4. Botha G. A. (1997b) in Maputaland: Focus on the Quaternary Evolution of the South-East African Coastal Plain, Field Guide and Abstracts, Soil development index (SDI): a method for characterising and distinguishing weathered dune sand, INQUA Commission on Quaternary Shorelines, Africa Subcommission, ed Botha G.A. pp 88–89.

5. Dune system remobilisation on the Maputaland coastal plain, South Africa during the Late Pleistocene and Holocene;Botha;Quaternary International,2000

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