Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5784374 | Marine Geology | 2017 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Water well logs and vibracores recovered from the lower Manawatu valley record the facies architecture, morphostratigraphy, and sedimentary evolution of this drowned river incised-valley estuary over the past c. 30,000Â years. The Manawatu incised-valley estuary was rapidly infilled during the Holocene, and as a result preserves a complete record of Holocene estuary evolution. The base of the Holocene fill is marked by fluvial gravels deposited by the Manawatu River during the lowstand of the Last Glacial Maximum. The gravels are overlain by back-stepping transgressive fluvial silts and clays. The transgressive fluvial unit is present only in the lower reaches of the valley due to accelerated sea-level rise during the latter stages of the marine transgression. Large volumes of transgressive marine sediment were delivered to the mouth of the valley by rising sea-levels during the early Holocene, forming a large subaqueous tidal delta. This delta accreted and subsequently evolved to form a subaerial barrier in the mid-Holocene, as sea-levels stabilised during the sea-level highstand. The central basin of the estuary was rapidly infilled by marine and fluvial sediment, and consequently lacks the mud facies characteristic of less-rapidly-evolved estuaries. The transition from the sandy central basin estuarine environment to the overlying floodplain environment was extremely rapid. In some locations in the valley the transitional fluvial bay-head delta is missing completely, while in most locations it is present only as a very thin deposit, indicative of this rapid environmental transition. Infilling of the estuarine central basin was extremely rapid, taking only 2000-2700Â years. The unique features of the Manawatu estuary's evolutionary history are interpreted to primarily reflect the rapid infilling of the palaeo-estuary driven by the high rates of sediment supplied to the valley from both marine and fluvial sources.
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Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Alastair J.H. Clement, Ian C. Fuller, Craig R. Sloss,