saharan palaeohydrology

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Saharan Palaeohydrology Kevin White 1 , Nick Drake 2 , Simon Armitage 3 , Ahmed El-Hawat 4 , Mustafa Salem 5 1 University of Reading, UK 2 King’s College London, UK 3 Royal Holloway, University of London, UK 4 Gayounis University, Benghazi, Libya 5 Al Fatah University, Tripoli, Libya

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Saharan Palaeohydrology Kevin White 1 , Nick Drake 2 , Simon Armitage 3 , Ahmed El-Hawat 4 , Mustafa Salem 5 1 University of Reading, UK 2 King’s College London, UK 3 Royal Holloway, University of London, UK 4 Gayounis University, Benghazi, Libya 5 Al Fatah University, Tripoli, Libya. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Saharan Palaeohydrology

Kevin White1, Nick Drake2, Simon Armitage3, Ahmed El-Hawat4, Mustafa Salem5

1University of Reading, UK2King’s College London, UK

3Royal Holloway, University of London, UK4Gayounis University, Benghazi, Libya

5Al Fatah University, Tripoli, Libya

Page 2: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Introduction

Reconstructing Saharan palaeohydrology is of importance because

1. Impact on modern water resources

Page 3: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Introduction

Reconstructing Saharan palaeohydrology is of importance because

1. Impact on modern water resources

2. Export of mineral aerosol

Page 4: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Introduction

Reconstructing Saharan palaeohydrology is of importance because

1. Impact on modern water resources

2. Export of mineral aerosol

3. Impact on human migration out of Africa

Page 5: Saharan Palaeohydrology
Page 6: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Lacustrine sediments widespread throughout the region, but when were the highstands and how large was the area inundated?

Page 7: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Field-based surveys are difficult in this terrain

Page 8: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Remote sensing enables fieldwork to be targeted to important palaeoenvironmental sites

Page 9: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Multispectral optical remote sensing enables identification of outcrops of lacustrine sediments rich in sulphates and carbonates

3 km

Page 10: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Radarsat

Landsat ETM+

5 km

But heavily silicified limestones can only be identified by radar

Page 11: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Well developed cyclical sedimentation around the margins of the basin (over 500m a.s.l.)

Page 12: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Five limestone/sand cycles are found throughout the Fazzan basin, but only the top cycle is young enough to fall within the range of OSL dating (420 +/- 34 ka)

Page 13: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Coquinas (340m a.s.l), death assemblages representing nearshore beach ridges (113 ±10, 107 ±6, 97.7 ±5.1)

Page 14: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Interdunes in the Ubari sand sea (ca.500m a.s.l.), higher mesas 118 +27–20, 47 +17–13 and 14.3 +1.7–1.7 ka. Dark humic palaeolake sediments in the base of interdunes 9.12 +0.09-0.14, 8.31 +/- 0.5 BP 8.42 +0.04-0.12, 6.69 +0.03-0.05, 5.94 +/- 0.4, 3.36 +/- 0.45 ka

Page 15: Saharan Palaeohydrology
Page 16: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Shorelines preserved adjacent to escarpment

Shorelines dated and their heights determined using DGPS

Page 17: Saharan Palaeohydrology

200 km

Maximum lake area (from SRTM3 DEM) is 134,617 km2, drainage basin area is 450,000km2 (ca. 1/3rd catchment)

Page 18: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Though not as big as Lake MegaChad (344,320 km2), Lake MegaFazzan is second largest Palaeolake in the Sahara

500m 527m

340m

Page 19: Saharan Palaeohydrology

Associated archaeology

Page 20: Saharan Palaeohydrology
Page 21: Saharan Palaeohydrology

• Modelling studies show that, in the vicinity of large water bodies, 6% lake cover affects the climate as much as orbital forcing (Coe and Foley 2003)

Page 22: Saharan Palaeohydrology

• Remote sensing and DEM analyses enable palaeohydrological reconstruction of Lake MegaFazzan

• Its maximum size was about 134,617 km2

• Evidence of highstands at 420, 120, 74, 47, 30, 14 and 10 ka• 4 as yet undated lacustrine cycles that are older than 420 ka• Wet during much of the Early Holocene; however, evidence

of abrupt shifts to arid conditions at 9.8, 7.4 and 6.0 ka• Further study of relationship with highstands in surrounding

basins is critical to understanding Saharan palaeoenvironments

Conclusions