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Sedimentary evolution of a late Pleistocene wetland indicating extreme coastal uplift in southern Tanzania
Authors:Markus Reuter  W.E. Piller
Affiliation:a Insitute for Earth Sciences, Graz University, Heinrichstr. 26, A-8010 Graz, Austria
b Natural History Museum Vienna, Burgring 7, A-1010 Vienna, Austria
c Upper Austrian State Museum, Welserstr. 20, A-4060 Linz-Leonding, Austria
Abstract:
Facies analyses of Pleistocene deposits from southern coastal Tanzania (Lindi District) document that sediments formed in a wetland evolving on a coastal terrace in the Lindi Fracture Zone foreland. The exposed succession shows a marked sedimentary change from tidal to terrestrial facies. 14C analyses on gastropod shells indicate the emergence of the Lindi coast at ∼ 44 14C ka BP. Emergence and subsequent elevation of terraces to 21 m above present-day sea level was linked to the falling eustatic sea level prior to the last glacial maximum, and to a periodic elevation due to extensional tectonic episodes in the eastern branch of the East African Rift System (EARS). Since ∼ 44 14C ka BP tectonic uplift at the coast was 80-110 m, comparable to that in the extreme uplift areas of the EARS.
Keywords:Coastal terrace   Facies   Sea level   Neotectonics   Weichselian   Tanzania
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