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Late Quaternary paleohydrology and surficial processes of the Atacama Desert, Chile: Evidence from wetland deposits and stable isotopes of soil salts

Posted on:2002-06-12Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of ArizonaCandidate:Rech, Jason ArnoldFull Text:PDF
GTID:1461390011496696Subject:Geology
Abstract/Summary:
The origin of pedogenic salts in the Atacama Desert has long been debated. Possible salt sources include in situ weathering at the soil site, local sources such as aerosols from the adjacent Pacific Ocean or salt-encrusted playas, and extra-local atmospheric dust. To identify the origin of Ca and S in Atacama soil salts, we determined δ 34S and 87Sr/86Sr values of soil gypsum/anhydrite and 87Sr/86Sr values of calcium carbonate along three east-west trending transects in the Atacama. Our results demonstrate the strong influence of marine aerosols on soil gypsum/anhydrite development in areas where marine fog penetrates inland. In areas where the Coastal Cordillera is >1200 m, however, coastal fog cannot penetrate inland and the contribution of marine aerosols to soils is greatly reduced. Salts in inland soils appear to originate from eolian redistribution of playa salts that are precipitated from evaporated ground water. This ground water has acquired its dissolved solids from water-rock interactions (both thermal and low-temperature) along flowpaths from recharge areas in the Andes. The spatial distribution of high-grade nitrate deposits appears to correspond with areas that receive the lowest fluxes of local dust, supporting arguments for an atmospheric source of nitrate.; Ground water in the Atacama is derived from precipitation in the High Andes (>3500 m) that infiltrates soils and then flows down the Pacific slope of the Andes to feed aquifers within the hyperarid core of the Atacama Desert. At many locations, ground water surfaces and creates springs, marshes, and wetlands. In order to track late Quaternary fluctuations in ground-water recharge, paleowetland deposits at eight separate locations (between 18°–26° S) were mapped and dated. Over 200 AMS 14C dates on a variety of materials provide firm age control on these deposits. Replication of time-stratigraphic units from an assortment of hydrologic settings and varying distances from recharge areas in the Andes show that ground-water systems are responding to regional changes in climate and that response times are probably short (<1000 years). Results suggest that the wettest period represented by deposits was during the late Glacial/early Holocene (∼16–9.5 ka B.P.) and that a moderately wet period occurred during the mid-Holocene (8–3 ka B.P.). Major drops in Atacama water tables, due to regional drought, occurred between 9.5–8 and ∼3 ka B.P. The late Holocene was characterized by generally lower water tables than during the mid-Holocene and subject to more frequent water table drops. Fluctuations in tropical Pacific Sea Surface Temperatures, the Walker Circulation, and ENSO variability is thought to be the major control on precipitation over this region during the late Quaternary.
Keywords/Search Tags:Atacama, Late quaternary, Salts, Soil, Deposits, Ground water
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