Abstract

Abstract Within the Daly River basin, Northern Territory, three erosion surfaces are described and their relationships to deep weathering are discussed. The Bradshaw surface is the highest and oldest surface recognized. It is of considerable perfection and forms main divides; it is associated with a deep lateritic profile with a strongly silicified horizon forming the lower part of the pallid zone and extending into rocks immediately beneath. The Maranboy surface now forms secondary divides, with related rock‐cut terraces, below the level of the Bradshaw surface. In most areas it was produced by the stripping of the upper, less silicified parts of the Bradshaw pallid zone. The Maranboy surface is associated with a lateritic weathering profile less deep than the Bradshaw profile and mainly developed in the Bradshaw weathering mantle. A younger erosion surface, the Tipperary surface, advanced by the removal of the Maranboy re‐weathered layer exposing the resistant Bradshaw silicified rock which commonly for...

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