4.2 Article

Mud redeposition during river incision as a factor affecting authigenic 10Be/9Be dating: Early Pleistocene large mammal fossil-bearing site Nova Vieska, eastern Danube Basin

Journal

JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 347-364

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.3482

Keywords

authigenic beryllium; cosmogenic nuclides; facies analysis; redeposition; wandering river

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This study examines the suitability of the authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating method for dating the deposits of an incising river, using the example of the Nova Vieska river terrace. The results show that the ages of the deposits range from approximately 4.13 to 1.39 million years ago. These findings highlight the impact of redeposition on the application of the authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating method in incising rivers.
This study examines the suitability of the authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating method to the dating of the deposits of an incising river, taking as an example the Nova Vieska river terrace, which accumulated during the neotectonic inversion of the Danube Basin (western Slovakia). The succession was formed by a wandering river with minor preservation of proximal floodplain muds. The frequent occurrence of mud intraclasts reflects significant input of eroded material from underlying, older successions. The ages of 13 authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating samples formed three groups: (1) samples from below the base of the river terrace yielded dates of similar to 4.13-3.70 Ma (including uncertainties); (2) muddy intraclasts from the river terrace gave an age range of similar to 2.79-1.96 Ma; and (3) in situ muddy layers had ages in the range of similar to 1.91-1.39 Ma. The large mammal fossil assemblage from channel thalweg deposits yielded a biostratigraphic age of similar to 3.6-2.2 Ma, matching the age of intraclasts, and thus emphasising the redeposited origin of those fossils. The relatively wide range of authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating ages is interpreted as a result of the redeposition of mud from older strata on three scales: decimetre-scale intraclasts, millimetre-scale rip-up clasts mixed into the newly formed beds, and formation of two authigenic rims with different age and Be-10/Be-9 records around individual particles. Considering these observations, an age range of in situ layers of similar to 1.91-1.39 Ma is proposed as the depositional age of the river terrace, with the most probable age falling within the most recent part of this interval. The effect of redeposition is thus shown to be potentially limiting to the application of authigenic Be-10/Be-9 dating to incising rivers, and stands in marked contrast to aggrading river settings, where redeposition of older sediments is limited and the degree of Be-10/Be-9 variability is low. (C) 2022 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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