Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4468852 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2008 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

Geological and geomorphological work in the endorheic Murzuq Basin (Fezzan) in the northern Sahara Desert, SW Libya, has revealed that the Middle Pleistocene Al Mahrúqah Formation consists of at least four limestone beds at four distinct elevations. The corresponding limestone beds are named (from oldest to youngest) the Antalkhatá Member, the Brak Member, the Bi'r az Zallaf Member, and the Aqar Member. The four members are interpreted as lacustrine deposits, and they are well distinguished by their spatial extent and lithology. Twenty-five radiometric and thermal ionisation mass spectrometric (TIMS) 230Th/U ages ranging from about 490–130 ka have been determined on these lacustrine limestones. According to these radiometric 230Th/U ages, the accumulation of the four limestone members of the Al Mahrúqah Formation followed the orbitally-forced (Milankovitch) eccentricity cycle of 100 ka during at least the last 400 ka. The four members formed in humid episodes of several tens of thousands of years' duration, when large lakes might have existed. The δ13C and δ18O values from samples of the four members of the Al Mahrúqah Formation provide independent genetic evidence on the lacustrine origin of the deposits in the Murzuq Basin. The spatial extent of the limestone deposits, and thus the intensity of the humid episodes, decreases at least from the Brak Member to the Aqar Member from about 52,000 km2 to 1400 km2, respectively. In spite of the limited precision and reliability of the new 230Th/U ages, it seems possible that short humid episodes interrupted the intervening arid episodes. Other long-term palaeohydrological records from northern and southern Africa as well as the Mediterranean region support the palaeoclimatic results from the Murzuq Basin.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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