4.5 Article

Terrestrial Sediments of the Earth: Development of a Global Unconsolidated Sediments Map Database (GUM)

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 997-1024

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017GC007273

Keywords

data set; global map; sediments

Funding

  1. German Science Foundation (DFG) through the Cluster of Excellence CLISAP2 (Universitat Hamburg) [DFG Exec177]
  2. PALMOD project BMBF-project PALMOD through the German Ministry of Education and Science (BMBF) as Research for Sustainability initiative (FONA) [01LP1506C]

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Mapped unconsolidated sediments cover half of the global land surface. They are of considerable importance for many Earth surface processes like weathering, hydrological fluxes or biogeochemical cycles. Ignoring their characteristics or spatial extent may lead to misinterpretations in Earth System studies. Therefore, a new Global Unconsolidated Sediments Map database (GUM) was compiled, using regional maps specifically representing unconsolidated and quaternary sediments. The new GUM database provides insights into the regional distribution of unconsolidated sediments and their properties. The GUM comprises 911,551 polygons and describes not only sediment types and subtypes, but also parameters like grain size, mineralogy, age and thickness where available. Previous global lithological maps or databases lacked detail for reported unconsolidated sediment areas or missed large areas, and reported a global coverage of 25 to 30%, considering the ice-free land area. Here, alluvial sediments cover about 23% of the mapped total ice-free area, followed by aeolian sediments (approximate to 21%), glacial sediments (approximate to 20%), and colluvial sediments (approximate to 16%). A specific focus during the creation of the database was on the distribution of loess deposits, since loess is highly reactive and relevant to understand geochemical cycles related to dust deposition and weathering processes. An additional layer compiling pyroclastic sediment is added, which merges consolidated and unconsolidated pyroclastic sediments. The compilation shows latitudinal abundances of sediment types related to climate of the past. The GUM database is available at the PANGAEA database (https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.884822).

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