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Non-pollen palynomorph assemblages in mid- to late Holocene wetland deposits and their palaeoenvironments of deposition: Microfossil signatures in sediment sequences of the Yangtze Delta coastal lowlands, East China

Innes, J.B.; Zong, Y.

Non-pollen palynomorph assemblages in mid- to late Holocene wetland deposits and their palaeoenvironments of deposition: Microfossil signatures in sediment sequences of the Yangtze Delta coastal lowlands, East China Thumbnail


Authors

J.B. Innes

Y. Zong



Abstract

Fluvial processes such as sediment deposition within drainage channels and seasonal overbank flooding, and fluvial events such as occasional high intensity floods all leave particular sedimentary signatures in terms of their lithology and also in their contained microfossil assemblages, which represent different environments of deposition. Over several thousand years the Yangtze River in eastern China has developed a coastal lowland plain around its delta that is mainly composed of stacked fluvial sediment facies, but also includes many marine or estuarine layers in some areas, as well as deposits of limnic and semi-terrestrial pool, marsh and mire origin, some of which are highly organic. The fluvial facies are dominantly clastic sequences of sands, silts and clays that reflect a range of deposition from quiet water to high energy conditions and in varying water depths, mainly governed by fluvial input from the Yangtze and the many other, smaller, rivers and streams of the deltaic lowland. The limnic and marshland sediments reflect autochthonous deposition in a range of freshwater wetland types of varying water depth, from lake through marsh/fen to surface peatland. Allied to lithological and pollen data, non-pollen palynomorph spore assemblages and abundances within these complex sedimentary sequences, particularly from algal communities, provide signatures of floodplain wetland depositional history and hydrodynamic patterns. We have used groupings of these microfossil data to characterise the sedimentary facies of the lower Yangtze coastal plain and to reconstruct hydrological history across the area at a range of spatial scales. Fluctuations in the relative taxa abundances are good indicators of changes in water levels at the site scale from surface waterlogging through reedswamp and fen to deeper open water. While some changes seem to be site specific, the data show flooding and increased water depths that correlate with known phases of climatic deterioration.

Citation

Innes, J., & Zong, Y. (2024). Non-pollen palynomorph assemblages in mid- to late Holocene wetland deposits and their palaeoenvironments of deposition: Microfossil signatures in sediment sequences of the Yangtze Delta coastal lowlands, East China. Geomorphology, 449, Article 109047. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2023.109047

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 27, 2023
Online Publication Date Mar 15, 2024
Publication Date 2024-03
Deposit Date Mar 5, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 5, 2024
Journal Geomorphology
Print ISSN 0169-555X
Electronic ISSN 0094-8659
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 449
Article Number 109047
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2023.109047
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2310512

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