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Combining satellite image data and field observations to characterize fresh-water carbonates in Kurkur Oasis, Southern Egypt

Authors :
Mohamed Bastawisy
Farouk El-Baz
Ahmed Gaber
Fikry I. Khalaf
Source :
Journal of African Earth Sciences. 139:193-204
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Several fresh-water carbonate deposits (tufa and travertine) were formed at different elevations within the Kurkur paleolake, 50 km west of Aswan, Egypt. Such paleolake was unique and confined in sag between the cuesta and the capping platform of Sin El-Kaddabaa Plateau. This work aims at integrating the remote sensing data together with the chemical and petrographic analyses to map and characterize these tufa and travertine deposits to define their paleo-depositional environment. A DEM with 2.5 m spatial resolution was generated from two ALOS/PRISM images to show geomorphological and hydrological parameters. In addition, full-polarimetric SAR data were used to investigate the scattering response of these tufa and travertine deposits. These deposits show a volume scattering response, with an increase in the pedestal height of the co- and cross-polarized signatures. The tufa and travertine deposits range from Pleistocene (older upper level) to Recent (younger lower level). The young tufa is hard, light brown porous and thinly-laminated, while the old tufa is generally coarse crystalline and consists of columnar pseudo denderitic calcite crystals. The travertine displays a stromatolitic fabric, where thin dark micritic algal laminae alternate with relatively thick calcitic bands (∼1 cm). Conducted XRD and chemical analyses reveal that these tufa and travertine are entirely composed of low magnesium calcite, with traces of quartz ( 13C and δ18 O values suggest that the old tufa have been developed during warm pluvial periods, while the younger ones were precipitated in drier periods. Two hypotheses were introduced to explain the changes in the hydrological regime of Kurkur paleolake; the first proposes a hydrological breaching due to water overflow on the lake's low periphery areas that led to their desiccation (where the tufa and travertine were deposited) and the second is the possible integration into the regional drainage networks of the area presently occupied by Lake Nasser.

Details

ISSN :
1464343X
Volume :
139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of African Earth Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bafa42b9d1b59ec7784be20d7e7cd862
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2017.12.008