Abstract

The sedimentary features and fossils within the Wadi Hasa Marl Formation coupled with optical luminescence chronology indicate alternating wet and dry periods have occurred on the Jordanian plateau since the last interglacial. The Jurf Ed Darawish Member rests unconformably on the Maastrichtian Muwaqqar Chalk Marl Formation and is composed predominantly of poorly sorted, clast-supported conglomerate. Palaeocurrents and clast composition indicate provenance from Cretaceous sedimentary rocks and Tertiary basalts to the west and southwest of the study site and the facies suggest a flashy alluvial depositional environment probably similar to the modern wadis. The overlying Burma Member consists of bedded grey-green clayey silts and marls with calcrete profiles, up to 1.2 m thick, and isolated gravel lenses. The fine-grained sediments contain charophytes, ostracods, bivalves and various species of gastropod indicating normal freshwater lacustrine conditions. The calcretes contain a poorly preserved fauna suggesting lacustrine deposition followed by subaerial exposure and pedogenesis. Three optical luminescence ages have been obtained from the Burma Member which suggest that the member ranges in age from >111 ka through to <40 ka. The facies variations are indicative of climatic fluctuations in Jordan during this period and human artefacts are found embedded in the sediments. This preliminary study suggests that the Late Quaternary central Jordan sedimentary record may preserve valuable evidence of complex climatic variation which will supplement the data from the Jordan Valley where tectonic activity complicates the sedimentary record.

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