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New insights into the age and formation of the Ankarokaroka lavaka and its associated sandy cover (NW Madagascar,Ankarafantsika natural reserve)
Authors:Michel Mietton  Stéphane Cordier  Manfred Frechen  Michel Dubar  Monique Beiner  Rafolo Andrianaivoarivony
Institution:1. Université de Lyon 3 Jean Moulin, UMR 5600 EVS – CRGA, Lyon Cedex 7, France;2. Département de Géographie et UMR 8591 CNRS, Université Paris 1‐Université Paris Est Créteil (UPEC), Créteil Cedex, France;3. Leibniz Institute for Applied Geophysics (LIAG), Geochronology and Isotope Hydrology, Hannover, Germany;4. Centre d'étude Préhistoire, Antiquité, Moyen‐?ge (UMR 6130), CNRS, Valbonne, France;5. CERPA, Campus lettres Sciences Humaines, Université de Lorraine, Nancy Cedex, France;6. Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines, BP 907, 101 Université d'Antananarivo, Madagascar
Abstract:Lavaka represent a typical erosional landform in Madagascar. The chronology of their formation remains, however, under discussion. Our research focuses on the Ankarokaroka lavaka, a spectacular landform located in NW Madagascar (Ankarafantsika natural reserve), which is characterized by the presence of sandy units of regional extension at its top. The two main units correspond to white and red sands, and are closely associated with specific vegetations (dry dense forest for the white sands, savannah grasslands for the red sands). We applied a geochronological approach based on Optically Stimulated Luminescence (for the coversands) associated with radiocarbon dating performed on archaeological remains found at the contact between the sands and the lavaka. The combination of this approach with field work and sedimentological analyses makes it possible to show that the sands experienced a complex history, both in terms of sedimentation and post‐sedimentary pedogenesis (podzolization of the white sands, rubefaction of the red sands). The numerical ages furthermore indicate that the Ankarokaroka lavaka formed between 18.5 ± 2.3 ka ago and the 14th century AD. The present study demonstrates that this lavaka has a climatic origin, and highlights the potential of OSL to date sediments associated with Madagascar lavaka. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:lavaka  coversands  Madagascar  OSL dating  Late Pleistocene
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