Abstract

Northern Spencer Gulf is the landward extremity of a shallow marine embayment which occupies a structural depression that overlies a major Precambrian lineament. Situated in a warm temperate climate, the low rainfall and high evaporation have created high salinities resulting in an hydrological inverse estuary. Modern sedimentation is dominantly biogenic carbonate to mixed terrigenous-carbonate. It is controlled by a mesotidal regime with occasional storm surges, minor wave activity, and a prolific growth of seagrass in shallow water. The skeletal detritus consists of bivalves, gastropods, forams, echinoids, coralline algae and bryozoa. The subtidal zone between 10–25 m is divided morphologically into two provinces. The wide southern part has a relatively smooth floor, but the northern part is narrower, and the seafloor is either scoured free of loose sediment, or covered with wide belts of megaripples. The subtidal zone between 0–10 m is everywhere dominated by seagrass meadows. The seagrasses are largely Posidonia australis and P. sinuosa and occupy broad depositional platforms, and discrete offshore banks. The seagrass meadows produce and trap mollusc/foram detritus, resulting in the accumulation of very poorly sorted, organically bound structureless carbonate muddy sand. Intertidal and supratidal zone sediments are very extensive. The intertidal zone includes bare sand flats or those covered by the seagrass Zostera. Dense mangroves ( Avicennia marina) from mean sea level to spring high-tide level are followed progressively by a halophytic (samphire) association and an Atriplex (saltbush) association. Extensive algal mats occur with the halophytes and extend into the mangrove forests. The sediments are muddy and only moderately calcareous. The supratidal zone consists mainly of bare carbonate flats, some stranded beach ridges, and coastal dunes. The carbonate flats contain discoidal gypsum crystals in weakly layered, fenestral, calcitic mud. Coastal changes during historic time are limited, and the dominant sedimentary regime in northern Spencer Gulf is the vertical growth of seagrass areas to form intertidal sand flats.

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