Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism...

Associated organisational unit

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England. / Gibbard, P. L.; Boreham, S.; Andrews, J. E. et al.
In: Quaternary International, Vol. 228, No. 1-2, 31.12.2010, p. 8-20.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Gibbard PL, Boreham S, Andrews JE, Maher BA. Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England. Quaternary International. 2010 Dec 31;228(1-2):8-20. Epub 2009 Mar 14. doi: 10.1016/j.quatint.2009.02.024

Author

Gibbard, P. L. ; Boreham, S. ; Andrews, J. E. et al. / Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England. In: Quaternary International. 2010 ; Vol. 228, No. 1-2. pp. 8-20.

Bibtex

@article{9452af7bb4b4444b90d23993f60238d7,
title = "Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England",
abstract = "The sedimentary succession of the West Runton Freshwater Bed (WRFB) is described and interpreted. The sediments represent a fluvial valley floor accumulation that trends west- to east, subparallel to the modern cliffline. Stabilisation of the stream channels was initially followed by deposition of fine-grained silt in standing water, punctuated by intermittent flood events. Decreased flood intensity resulted in vertical accretion of fine-grained, organic, fossiliferous sediments in carbonate-rich spring water. Increased organic deposition produced a transition to black detrital sediment. Periodic flooding continued, but flood frequency decreased in response to reduction in accommodation. Local erosion of channel banks and floors also occurred. The sediments were disturbed by water-release structures and bioturbation, the latter resulting from large mammals locally entering the channel and pools, churning the deposits during walking, bathing and so on. River-flow velocity diminished later as forest vegetation stabilised catchment and valley-floor ground surfaces. Stabilisation of the channel led to deposition from low-velocity flowing and standing water. The uppermost part of the succession indicates vertical accretion, sheet-like deposition. The organic silts were deposited in an anoxic environment, and organic sulphur from rotting organic matter allowed formation of early diagenetic sulphides. Deposition began during the late-glacial (Beestonian Stage) and continued into the first half of a temperate-climate, interglacial event (the Cromerian Stage s.s.). The infill comprises an overall finingupward sequence, the stream adopted a stable meandering pattern. The WRFB stream showed typical chalk-stream behaviour. The magnetic polarity of the WRFB sediments is normal. The palaeomagnetic data indicates that the sediments are of Brunhes Chron age, and imply that they post-date mid-MIS 19.",
keywords = "Palaeomagnetic dating, Quaternary sediments, sediment geochemistry, greigite.",
author = "Gibbard, {P. L.} and S. Boreham and Andrews, {J. E.} and Maher, {Barbara A.}",
year = "2010",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.quatint.2009.02.024",
language = "English",
volume = "228",
pages = "8--20",
journal = "Quaternary International",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sedimentation, geochemistry and palaeomagnetism of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk, England

AU - Gibbard, P. L.

AU - Boreham, S.

AU - Andrews, J. E.

AU - Maher, Barbara A.

PY - 2010/12/31

Y1 - 2010/12/31

N2 - The sedimentary succession of the West Runton Freshwater Bed (WRFB) is described and interpreted. The sediments represent a fluvial valley floor accumulation that trends west- to east, subparallel to the modern cliffline. Stabilisation of the stream channels was initially followed by deposition of fine-grained silt in standing water, punctuated by intermittent flood events. Decreased flood intensity resulted in vertical accretion of fine-grained, organic, fossiliferous sediments in carbonate-rich spring water. Increased organic deposition produced a transition to black detrital sediment. Periodic flooding continued, but flood frequency decreased in response to reduction in accommodation. Local erosion of channel banks and floors also occurred. The sediments were disturbed by water-release structures and bioturbation, the latter resulting from large mammals locally entering the channel and pools, churning the deposits during walking, bathing and so on. River-flow velocity diminished later as forest vegetation stabilised catchment and valley-floor ground surfaces. Stabilisation of the channel led to deposition from low-velocity flowing and standing water. The uppermost part of the succession indicates vertical accretion, sheet-like deposition. The organic silts were deposited in an anoxic environment, and organic sulphur from rotting organic matter allowed formation of early diagenetic sulphides. Deposition began during the late-glacial (Beestonian Stage) and continued into the first half of a temperate-climate, interglacial event (the Cromerian Stage s.s.). The infill comprises an overall finingupward sequence, the stream adopted a stable meandering pattern. The WRFB stream showed typical chalk-stream behaviour. The magnetic polarity of the WRFB sediments is normal. The palaeomagnetic data indicates that the sediments are of Brunhes Chron age, and imply that they post-date mid-MIS 19.

AB - The sedimentary succession of the West Runton Freshwater Bed (WRFB) is described and interpreted. The sediments represent a fluvial valley floor accumulation that trends west- to east, subparallel to the modern cliffline. Stabilisation of the stream channels was initially followed by deposition of fine-grained silt in standing water, punctuated by intermittent flood events. Decreased flood intensity resulted in vertical accretion of fine-grained, organic, fossiliferous sediments in carbonate-rich spring water. Increased organic deposition produced a transition to black detrital sediment. Periodic flooding continued, but flood frequency decreased in response to reduction in accommodation. Local erosion of channel banks and floors also occurred. The sediments were disturbed by water-release structures and bioturbation, the latter resulting from large mammals locally entering the channel and pools, churning the deposits during walking, bathing and so on. River-flow velocity diminished later as forest vegetation stabilised catchment and valley-floor ground surfaces. Stabilisation of the channel led to deposition from low-velocity flowing and standing water. The uppermost part of the succession indicates vertical accretion, sheet-like deposition. The organic silts were deposited in an anoxic environment, and organic sulphur from rotting organic matter allowed formation of early diagenetic sulphides. Deposition began during the late-glacial (Beestonian Stage) and continued into the first half of a temperate-climate, interglacial event (the Cromerian Stage s.s.). The infill comprises an overall finingupward sequence, the stream adopted a stable meandering pattern. The WRFB stream showed typical chalk-stream behaviour. The magnetic polarity of the WRFB sediments is normal. The palaeomagnetic data indicates that the sediments are of Brunhes Chron age, and imply that they post-date mid-MIS 19.

KW - Palaeomagnetic dating

KW - Quaternary sediments

KW - sediment geochemistry

KW - greigite.

U2 - 10.1016/j.quatint.2009.02.024

DO - 10.1016/j.quatint.2009.02.024

M3 - Journal article

VL - 228

SP - 8

EP - 20

JO - Quaternary International

JF - Quaternary International

IS - 1-2

ER -