4.3 Article

Surface sediment composition and depositional environments in tropical Lake Sentani, Papua Province, Indonesia

Journal

JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY
Volume 69, Issue 1, Pages 1-20

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10933-022-00259-4

Keywords

Tropical lake; Lacustrine sediment; XRF analysis; Multivariate statistics

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The sediment in Tropical Lake Sentani shows large spatial heterogeneity, which is mainly influenced by catchment geology and topography, river runoff, and water depth. Three different types of sediment are identified based on elemental compositions, and variations in redox conditions are observed. This study highlights the importance of understanding lateral heterogeneity for interpreting the variations recorded by these sediments.
Tropical Lake Sentani in the Indonesian Province Papua consists of four separate basins and is surrounded by a catchment with a very diverse geology. We characterized the surface sediment (upper 5 cm) of the lake's four sub-basins based on multivariate statistical analyses (principal component analysis, hierarchical clustering) of major element compositions obtained by X-ray fluorescence scanning. Three types of sediment are identified based on distinct compositional differences between rivers, shallow/proximal and deep/distal lake sediments. The different sediment types are mainly characterized by the correlation of elements associated with redox processes (S, Mn, Fe), carbonates (Ca), and detrital input (Ti, Al, Si, K) derived by river discharge. The relatively coarse-grained river sediments mainly derive form the mafic catchment geology and contribution of the limestone catchment geology is only limited. Correlation of redox sensitive and detrital elements are used to reveal oxidation conditions, and indicate oxic conditions in river samples and reducing conditions for lake sediments. Organic carbon (TOC) generally correlates with redox sensitive elements, although a correlation between TOC and individual elements change strongly between the three sediment types. Pyrite is the quantitatively dominant reduced sulfur mineral, monosulfides only reach appreciable concentrations in samples from rivers draining mafic and ultramafic catchments. Our study shows large spatial heterogeneity within the lake's sub-basins that is mainly caused by catchment geology and topography, river runoff as well as the bathymetry and the depth of the oxycline. We show that knowledge about lateral heterogeneity is crucial for understanding the geochemical and sedimentological variations recorded by these sediments. The highly variable conditions make Lake Sentani a natural laboratory, with its different sub-basins representing different depositional environments under identical tropical climate conditions.

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