4.2 Article

Late Quaternary sedimentological history of a submerged gravel barrier beach complex, southern Namibia

Journal

GEO-MARINE LETTERS
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 469-491

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00367-019-00590-2

Keywords

Gravelly barrier; Beach complex; Overstepping; Meltwater Pulse 1B; Submerged landscape; Orange River shelf; Seismic reflection

Funding

  1. Namdeb Diamond Corporation (Pty) Limited

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Through comprehensive seismic, stratigraphic, and sedimentological analysis, this paper describes the stratigraphic architecture of the late Quaternary sediments and depositional dynamics in a region similar to 3.5 km offshore of the current south-west Namibian coastline. The landscape evolution model of this area is based on 2D seismic reflection profiles calibrated to approximately 500 boreholes, which yielded sedimentary and seismic facies data of exceptionally high resolution. The data permitted the characterization of four sedimentary facies units and the reconstruction of the submerged landscape dominated by a barrier complex. We compare this barrier complex with the sediment bodies preserved along the adjacent coastline, and account for their geological evolution in response to late Quaternary relative sea-level fluctuations along the West Coast. The most noteworthy depositional units in the study area are the normal regressive coarse gravel beaches trending shore parallel, with the primary gravel barrier and its preserved coeval back-barrier deposits that exceed 7 km in length along the coast. Based on the radiocarbon dates from the rarely preserved early flooding facies (14.0 and 13.3 ka BP), the primary barrier complex formed during a stage of slowing rising relative sea-level subsequent to Meltwater Pulse 1A. Moreover, the barrier beach complex formed on a low-gradient palaeo-bathymetry slope that is punctuated by a break on its landward side (i.e., a regional knick point), which promoted the local accommodation of sediments. The preservation of the barrier beach complex and back-barrier deposits is attributed to rapid relative sea-level rise, linked to the early Holocene Meltwater Pulse 1B between similar to 11.5 and 11.2 ka BP, and an increase in back-barrier accommodation facilitated by the antecedent topography.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available