Abstract

AbstractThis paper describes an assemblage of diverse floodplain facies of reworked loess (facies b, c) in a Middle Pleistocene monsoonal setting of the Hanzhong Basin, central China. The vertical and lateral sedimentary sequences show changing energy conditions. Apart from the highest energy in the channel facies (facies a), a relatively high energy floodplain environment (facies b) prevailed in waterlogged conditions, with small, laterally migrating (sub)channels. Facies b generally interfingers with aggrading horizontal sheets of overbank deposits in alluvial pools and swamps in a floodplain with much lower energy (facies c), in which phases of stability (soil formation) occasionally interrupted overbank deposition. Reworked loess forms the main part of the floodplain deposits. The paleosols are considered to have been formed under low hydrodynamic conditions in an interglacial environment. These interglacial conditions follow the commonly assumed glacial conditions of channel facies a. The sedimentary successions in the floodplain show a recurrent composition and cyclicity between wet and dry floodplain sedimentation terminated by stability with soil formation. The cyclic rhythm of stacked high- and low-energy floodplain sediments is attributed to varied intensity of different hydrodynamic flooding events that may have been due to changing monsoonal rainfall or simple intrinsic fluvial behavior.

Highlights

  • Floodplain deposits are an integral part of the fluvial system, and appear to have been a favorable occupation site for ancient humans, and are an important archive to aid in understanding past environmental and geomorphological dynamics

  • The depositional environment changed to a floodplain environment with much smaller sized, laterally migrating and vertically incising secondary channels in relatively high-energy conditions, alternating with deposition on a floodplain with low energy with phases of stability allowing for soil formation

  • A 20-m thick fluvial sediment series is described from the Hanzhong Basin, central China, with monsoonal climate conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Floodplain deposits are an integral part of the fluvial system, and appear to have been a favorable occupation site for ancient humans, and are an important archive to aid in understanding past environmental and geomorphological dynamics. Original structural depositional sequences from bottom to top are generally made up of channel-lag deposits or debris flow(s), braided bar deposits, and floodplain deposits (Miall, 2014). The original structural depositional series of a meandering river are relatively more complicated, with. No matter what type of river is considered, grain sizes at the base of a sediment depositional series are, on average, strikingly coarser than the upper part because of upwardly decreasing hydrologic energy

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