The characteristics and source of laminated mud at Lake Barrine, Northeast Australia

In a small (1 km 2) crater lake in the Australian upland tropics (17°15′S, 145°38′E, 721 m a.s.l.), laminated mud has accumulated throughout the past 5 ka. It is limited to a central region below 50–67 m of water where it is protected by a monimolimnion. The contents of the laminae (e.g., total lake...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inQuaternary science reviews Vol. 18; no. 14; pp. 1597 - 1624
Main Authors Walker, D., Owen, J.A.K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.12.1999
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Summary:In a small (1 km 2) crater lake in the Australian upland tropics (17°15′S, 145°38′E, 721 m a.s.l.), laminated mud has accumulated throughout the past 5 ka. It is limited to a central region below 50–67 m of water where it is protected by a monimolimnion. The contents of the laminae (e.g., total lake products, organic detritus, diatoms, pollen grains, vivianite crystals) distinguish two contrasting types, namely detritus-rich and detritus-poor. Judged against radiocarbon dates over long sequences, these couplets are not annual. Gravimetric, mineralogical and chemical observations on the mud, and on suspended organic and inorganic matter caught through several periods, indicate some diagenetic changes across the mud–water interface. Diatom analyses do not assist in relating mud type to source or period of origin. The most likely mechanism of lamination is that continuous deposition of clay, with small and varied detrital accompaniment, is periodically enhanced by greater detrital input. This occurs in some, but not all, periods of winter isothermy when ground temperatures fall to zero and below on several consecutive nights. This leads to the stirring of sediments in water shallower than 50 m and their relocation in the deeper meromictic zone. Fine variations in, e.g., diatom content, partly independent of lamination type, probably contain a wealth of detail about the lake’s environmental history.
ISSN:0277-3791
1873-457X
DOI:10.1016/S0277-3791(98)00119-X