Abstract

Lacustrine laminated sediments are often varves representing annual rhythmic deposition. The Dead Sea high-stand laminated sections consist of mm-scale alternating detrital and authigenic aragonite laminae. Previous studies assumed these laminae were varves deposited seasonally. However, this assumption has never been robustly validated. Here we report an examination of the seasonal deposition of detrital-aragonite couplets from two well-known Late Holocene laminated sections at the Ze'elim fan-delta using palynology and grain-size distribution analyses. These analyses are complemented by the study of contemporary flash-flood samples and multivariate statistical analysis. Because transport affects the pollen preservation state, well–preserved (mostly) air-borne transported pollen was analysed separately from badly-preserved pollen and fungal spores, which are more indicative of water transport and reworking from soils. Our results indicate that (i) both detrital and aragonite laminae were deposited during the rainy season; (ii) aragonite laminae have significantly lower reworked and fungal spore concentrations than detrital and flash-flood samples; and (iii) detrital laminae are composed of recycling of local and distal sources, with coarser particles that were initially deposited in the Dead Sea watershed and later transported via run-off to the lake. This is in line with previous carbon balance studies that showed that aragonite precipitation occurs after the massive input of TCO2 associated with run-off episodes. Consequently, at least for the Holocene Ze'elim Formation, laminated sediments cannot be considered as varves. Older Quaternary laminated sequences should be re-evaluated.

Highlights

  • Fine-laminated lacustrine sequences have commonly proven to be annually deposited

  • If Dead Sea laminae were varves in the way assumed by some authors, pollen spectra in aragonite laminae would correspond always to summer bloomers, while in detrital layers would have to correspond to autumn-winter-spring pollen assemblages

  • This study indicates that, in contrast to previous assumptions, detrital-aragonite couplets were deposited during the rainy season as a result of flash-flood events, Dead Sea laminated sediments cannot be considered as varves

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Fine-laminated lacustrine sequences have commonly proven to be annually deposited. varve-based chronologies of these sequences can be obtained (e.g. Ojala and Alenius, 2005; Zolitschka et al, 2015). Large portions of the Dead Sea Basin (DSB) Late Quaternary sediments are laminated (Neev and Emery, 1967; Begin et al, 1974), i.e. the Lisan Formation (70e13 ka BP; Stein and Goldstein, 2006; Torfstein et al, 2013) and the Ze'elim Formation (

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.