Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies

Heuweltjies (Afrikaans for "little hills") are non-anthropogenic, regularly dispersed earth mounds up to 32 meters in diameter and approximately 1.4 meters in height, that dot about 25% of the land surface of south-western southern Africa. The zoogenic "termite" hypothesis has been widely accepted...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adams, Ismat
Other Authors: Khomo, Lesego
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2015
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613273685229568
access_status_str Open Access
author Adams, Ismat
author2 Khomo, Lesego
author_browse Adams, Ismat
Khomo, Lesego
author_facet Khomo, Lesego
Adams, Ismat
author_sort Adams, Ismat
collection Thesis
description Heuweltjies (Afrikaans for "little hills") are non-anthropogenic, regularly dispersed earth mounds up to 32 meters in diameter and approximately 1.4 meters in height, that dot about 25% of the land surface of south-western southern Africa. The zoogenic "termite" hypothesis has been widely accepted as a hypothesis of heuweltjie origin. However, the recent "vegetation-patch-erosion" (VPE) hypothesis suggests an equally likely explanation for heuweltjie formation. The aim of this investigation was firstly to determine the influence of dust deposition and carbonates on heuweltjie formation in order to gain insight into the formative process of heuweltjies. The second part of this investigation sought to further test the VPE hypothesis by examining whether erosion alone could give rise to heuweltjies within a reasonable time frame. Soil surveys were conducted on 8 heuweltjies and at 2 inter-heuweltjie areas at depths of up to 0.9m. Textural analysis of soil samples collected from the 8 heuweltjies as well as an additional 11 heuweltjies was conducted. Bulk density was also evaluated for each horizon of each heuweltjie and inter-heuweltjie. Carbonates in all soil samples were determined by acid digestion of soils. A digital elevation model of the Clanwilliam area was constructed and used to obtain heuweltjie area and elevation. There was no difference in average soil texture moving from the centre of a heuweltjie to its periphery (indicating that they formed by layered stratification rather than radially from the centre). There was an apparent difference in texture and carbonates between heuweltjie and inter-heuweltjie zones. Mass of fines (silt and clay) and carbonates were both positively correlated with heuweltjie mass, but were also collinear. Non-parametric regression of heuweltjie mass against both fines and carbonates revealed a clear linear trend. However, the trend between fines and carbonates suggested that fines played a central role in both heuweltjie and carbonate formation and that carbonate took on only a secondary role in heuweltjie formation. Erosion alone would have taken 11000 years to form the heuweltjies. However, some calcretes within heuweltjies have been found to be older than 11000 years, suggesting that erosion has not had a major influence on heuweltjie formation. These findings support the vegetation-patch-erosion hypothesis. However they support dust deposition rather than erosion as a primary contributor to heuweltjie formation.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14066
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:31.121Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14066 The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies Adams, Ismat Khomo, Lesego Ecology Heuweltjies (Afrikaans for "little hills") are non-anthropogenic, regularly dispersed earth mounds up to 32 meters in diameter and approximately 1.4 meters in height, that dot about 25% of the land surface of south-western southern Africa. The zoogenic "termite" hypothesis has been widely accepted as a hypothesis of heuweltjie origin. However, the recent "vegetation-patch-erosion" (VPE) hypothesis suggests an equally likely explanation for heuweltjie formation. The aim of this investigation was firstly to determine the influence of dust deposition and carbonates on heuweltjie formation in order to gain insight into the formative process of heuweltjies. The second part of this investigation sought to further test the VPE hypothesis by examining whether erosion alone could give rise to heuweltjies within a reasonable time frame. Soil surveys were conducted on 8 heuweltjies and at 2 inter-heuweltjie areas at depths of up to 0.9m. Textural analysis of soil samples collected from the 8 heuweltjies as well as an additional 11 heuweltjies was conducted. Bulk density was also evaluated for each horizon of each heuweltjie and inter-heuweltjie. Carbonates in all soil samples were determined by acid digestion of soils. A digital elevation model of the Clanwilliam area was constructed and used to obtain heuweltjie area and elevation. There was no difference in average soil texture moving from the centre of a heuweltjie to its periphery (indicating that they formed by layered stratification rather than radially from the centre). There was an apparent difference in texture and carbonates between heuweltjie and inter-heuweltjie zones. Mass of fines (silt and clay) and carbonates were both positively correlated with heuweltjie mass, but were also collinear. Non-parametric regression of heuweltjie mass against both fines and carbonates revealed a clear linear trend. However, the trend between fines and carbonates suggested that fines played a central role in both heuweltjie and carbonate formation and that carbonate took on only a secondary role in heuweltjie formation. Erosion alone would have taken 11000 years to form the heuweltjies. However, some calcretes within heuweltjies have been found to be older than 11000 years, suggesting that erosion has not had a major influence on heuweltjie formation. These findings support the vegetation-patch-erosion hypothesis. However they support dust deposition rather than erosion as a primary contributor to heuweltjie formation. 2015-09-23T07:36:19Z 2015-09-23T07:36:19Z 2013 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14066 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Ecology
Adams, Ismat
The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
title_full The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
title_fullStr The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
title_short The Influence of dust deposition, carbonates and erosion on the formation of Clanwilliam heuweltjies
title_sort influence of dust deposition carbonates and erosion on the formation of clanwilliam heuweltjies
topic Ecology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14066
work_keys_str_mv AT adamsismat theinfluenceofdustdepositioncarbonatesanderosionontheformationofclanwilliamheuweltjies
AT adamsismat influenceofdustdepositioncarbonatesanderosionontheformationofclanwilliamheuweltjies