Abstract

This study demonstrates the usefulness of palynofacies as a tool for characterizing the origin, transport, and settling of particulate organic matter preserved in fluvial plain sediments and its integration with diatoms for inferring past depositional environments. Palynofacies, diatoms, and organic geochemistry (S, C/S) data from a sediment core (PR07) collected from the Jucuruçu River valley in coastal southern Bahia, northeastern Brazil were used to better understand ecosystem changes that occurred in the region during the last ~7.5k years. Elemental values (S: 0.15–5.9%; C/S: 0.12–41.5) suggest marine and fluvial influences in the valley during the Holocene, and organic matter was derived from freshwater and marine phytoplankton. The presence of heterolithic deposits, brackish/marine diatoms, predominance of amorphous group, non-opaque phytoclasts, pyrite crystals, and marine microfossils suggests that a tidal flat formed during a mid-Holocene sea-level highstand. A fluvial plain developed in the last 5k years, due to marine regression and an increase in fluvial sediment supply to the region.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call