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Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei

Coastal lakes in the south coast of South Africa contain sediments with good records of palaeoenvironmental changes. Swartvlei is the largest of the lakes in the Wilderness Embayment and is connected to the Indian Ocean via an estuary. The lake is believed to have been formed during sea-level regres...

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Main Author: Maboya, Matjie Lillian
Other Authors: Meadows, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Maboya, Matjie Lillian
author2 Meadows, Michael
author_browse Maboya, Matjie Lillian
Meadows, Michael
author_facet Meadows, Michael
Maboya, Matjie Lillian
author_sort Maboya, Matjie Lillian
collection Thesis
description Coastal lakes in the south coast of South Africa contain sediments with good records of palaeoenvironmental changes. Swartvlei is the largest of the lakes in the Wilderness Embayment and is connected to the Indian Ocean via an estuary. The lake is believed to have been formed during sea-level regressions in the quaternary, and separated from Groenvlei lake between 4000 and 2000 cal BP. There are questions about dominant precipitation regimes as well as the onset, cessation and altitude of marine transgressions in the area. In this study, Holocene sediments from Swartvlei Lake were extracted and investigated using multiple methods. These include organic and inorganic geochemical proxies and multidating approach through radiocarbon and OSL dating. A composite profile was made using marker layers with lithostratigraphic distinctions combining three cores into one continuous, 7 m long core spanning 8600 cal BP. The core was subdivided into two distinct zones namely, Unit A (8600 to 3500 cal BP) and Unit B (3500 cal BP to present), identified using cluster analysis on particle size data. The results reveal low sea-levels with limited precipitation and aquatic productivity during the early Holocene, followed by a marine incursion from 4500 to 3500 cal BP and moister conditions thereafter. This marine incursion, marked by increased Ca and TIC concentrations, occurred when the physical barriers were breached, and the estuarine channel widened due to a landward strandline migration. Pronounced riverine input due to increased precipitation was observed after 3500 cal BP, with strong minerogenic input and lowered sealevel. An influx of silt and clay material that dominate the top half of the core marks Swartvlei’s evolution into more lacustrine conditions and its separation from Groenvlei during the same period. A more humid climate is further inferred from organic proxies that indicate a greater in-wash of vascular vegetation during this period, as well as higher productivity from 3500 to 1400 cal BP. In addition, high biogenic silica concentrations indicate increased bio-productivity during the Little Ice Age (LIA) while increased sedimentation rates suggest that anthropogenic activity impacted the lake from 150 cal BP. This study adds insight to the geomorphic evolution of Swartvlei and highlights the usefulness of geochemical analyses in the elucidation of regional quaternary environmental and climatic changes.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30922
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:37:15.153Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30922 Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei Maboya, Matjie Lillian Meadows, Michael Haberzettl, Torsten Environmental and Geographical Sciences Coastal lakes in the south coast of South Africa contain sediments with good records of palaeoenvironmental changes. Swartvlei is the largest of the lakes in the Wilderness Embayment and is connected to the Indian Ocean via an estuary. The lake is believed to have been formed during sea-level regressions in the quaternary, and separated from Groenvlei lake between 4000 and 2000 cal BP. There are questions about dominant precipitation regimes as well as the onset, cessation and altitude of marine transgressions in the area. In this study, Holocene sediments from Swartvlei Lake were extracted and investigated using multiple methods. These include organic and inorganic geochemical proxies and multidating approach through radiocarbon and OSL dating. A composite profile was made using marker layers with lithostratigraphic distinctions combining three cores into one continuous, 7 m long core spanning 8600 cal BP. The core was subdivided into two distinct zones namely, Unit A (8600 to 3500 cal BP) and Unit B (3500 cal BP to present), identified using cluster analysis on particle size data. The results reveal low sea-levels with limited precipitation and aquatic productivity during the early Holocene, followed by a marine incursion from 4500 to 3500 cal BP and moister conditions thereafter. This marine incursion, marked by increased Ca and TIC concentrations, occurred when the physical barriers were breached, and the estuarine channel widened due to a landward strandline migration. Pronounced riverine input due to increased precipitation was observed after 3500 cal BP, with strong minerogenic input and lowered sealevel. An influx of silt and clay material that dominate the top half of the core marks Swartvlei’s evolution into more lacustrine conditions and its separation from Groenvlei during the same period. A more humid climate is further inferred from organic proxies that indicate a greater in-wash of vascular vegetation during this period, as well as higher productivity from 3500 to 1400 cal BP. In addition, high biogenic silica concentrations indicate increased bio-productivity during the Little Ice Age (LIA) while increased sedimentation rates suggest that anthropogenic activity impacted the lake from 150 cal BP. This study adds insight to the geomorphic evolution of Swartvlei and highlights the usefulness of geochemical analyses in the elucidation of regional quaternary environmental and climatic changes. 2020-02-07T12:53:58Z 2020-02-07T12:53:58Z 2019 2020-01-27T10:13:59Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30922 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Sciences
Maboya, Matjie Lillian
Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
title_full Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
title_fullStr Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
title_full_unstemmed Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
title_short Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in South Africa's year-round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from Swartvlei
title_sort palaeoenvironmental reconstruction in south africa s year round rainfall zone using multiproxy geochemical analyses on lake sediments from swartvlei
topic Environmental and Geographical Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30922
work_keys_str_mv AT maboyamatjielillian palaeoenvironmentalreconstructioninsouthafricasyearroundrainfallzoneusingmultiproxygeochemicalanalysesonlakesedimentsfromswartvlei