학술논문

Deltaic sedimentation in a modern rift lake
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geological Society of America Bulletin. 107(7):812-829
Subject
23|Geomorphology
06A|Sedimentary petrology - sed rocks, sediments
20|Geophysics - applied (geophysical surveys & methods)
acoustical methods
Africa
bathymetry
Cenozoic
cores
deltaic sedimentation
deltas
East Africa
East African Lakes
geophysical methods
geophysical profiles
geophysical surveys
high-resolution methods
Holocene
lacustrine environment
lacustrine features
lacustrine sedimentation
Lake Malawi
lakes
Malawi
modern
Mozambique
Quaternary
reflection methods
rift zones
sedimentation
sediments
seismic methods
seismic profiles
sonar methods
structural controls
surveys
Tanzania
vertical seismic profiles
Language
English
ISSN
0016-7606
Abstract
Five of the largest deltas of Lake Malawi in Africa were surveyed to compare and contrast bathymetry, bedform distribution, and sedimentary facies using high-resolution seismic reflection profiling, side-scan sonar, and sediment coring. Striking variability in delta morphology and depositional facies was found, depending primarily on tectonic setting but also influenced strongly by lake processes and the significant past variability in lake level resulting from climatic change. Deltas on border faults and accommodation zones have much steeper offshore gradients than those on shoaling margins, resulting in narrow sandy shelves, abundant mass wasting, and sand bypass to the deep basins as turbidites, either confined to turbidity channels or spread across sand ramps. At the axial margin of the lake, where the trend of faults is orthogonal to the shoreline, deltaic facies are dominated by mud, mass wasting is common, and numerous turbidite channels coalesce into a single major, fault-controlled channel. In contrast, deltas on shoaling margins have broad, sandy shelves that are strongly influenced by coastal currents, which rework the sands into well-developed sand wave fields. Turbidites are not common in this setting, and the slope regions are covered with poorly sorted sandy muds with little evidence for downslope transport.