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The Segmented Zambezi Sedimentary System from Source to Sink: 2. Geochemistry, Clay Minerals, and Detrital Geochronology.

Authors :
Garzanti, Eduardo
Bayon, Germain
Dinis, Pedro
Vermeesch, Pieter
Pastore, Guido
Resentini, Alberto
Barbarano, Marta
Ncube, Lindani
Van Niekerk, Helena Johanna
Source :
Journal of Geology; May2022, Vol. 130 Issue 3, p171-208, 38p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Elemental geochemistry, Nd isotopes, clay minerals, and U-Pb zircon ages integrated by petrographic and heavy-mineral data offer a multiproxy panorama of mud and sand composition across the Zambezi sediment-routing system. Detrital zircon geochronology highlights the four major episodes of crustal growth in southern Africa: Irumide ages predominate over Pan-African, Eburnean, and Neoarchean ages. Smectite, dominant in mud generated from Karoo basalts or in the equatorial/winter-dry climate of the Mozambican lowlands, prevails over illite and kaolinite. Elemental geochemistry reflects quartz addition by recycling (Uppermost Zambezi), supply from Karoo basalts (Upper Zambezi), and first-cycle provenance from Precambrian basements (Lower Zambezi). Mildly negative for sediments derived from mafic granulites, gabbros, and basalts, ε<subscript>Nd</subscript> values are most negative for sand derived from cratonic gneisses. Intrasample variability among cohesive mud, very coarse silt, and sand is principally caused by the concentration of Nd-rich monazite in the fine tail of the size distribution. The settling-equivalence effect also explains deviations from the theoretical relationship between ε<subscript>Nd</subscript> and T <subscript>Nd,DM</subscript> model ages, suggesting that monazite carries a more negative ε<subscript>Nd</subscript> signal than less dense and less durable heavy minerals. Elemental geochemistry and Nd isotopes reveal that the Mazowe-Luenha river system contributes most of the sediment reaching the Zambezi delta today, with minor supply from the Shire River. Sediment yields and erosion rates are much lower on the low-relief Kalahari Plateau than in rugged Precambrian terranes. On the plateau, mineralogical and geochemical indices testify to extensive breakdown of feldspars and garnet unjustified by the present dry climate. Detrital kaolinite is recycled by incision of Cretaceous–Cenozoic paleosols even in the wetter lower catchment, where inefficient hydrolysis is testified to by abundant fresh feldspars and undepleted Ca and Na. Mud geochemistry and surficial corrosion of ferromagnesian minerals indicate that, at present, weathering increases only slightly downstream the Zambezi River. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221376
Volume :
130
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157230283
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/719166