Title
Clay mineral variations in Holocene terrestrial sediments from the Indus Basin
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2012
Abstract
We employed X-ray diffraction methods to quantify clay mineral assemblages in the Indus Delta and flood plains since ~. 14. ka, spanning a period of strong climatic change. Assemblages are dominated by smectite and illite, with minor chlorite and kaolinite. Delta sediments integrate clays from across the basin and show increasing smectite input between 13 and 7.5. ka, indicating stronger chemical weathering as the summer monsoon intensified. Changes in clay mineralogy postdate changes in climate by 5-3. ka, reflecting the time needed for new clay minerals to form and be transported to the delta. Samples from the flood plains in Punjab show evidence for increased chemical weathering towards the top of the sections (6-<4 ka), counter to the trend in the delta, at a time of monsoon weakening. Clay mineral assemblages within sandy flood-plain sediment have higher smectite/(illite. +. chlorite) values than interbedded mudstones, suggestive of either stronger weathering or more sediment reworking since the Mid Holocene. We show that marine records are not always good proxies for weathering across the entire flood plain. Nonetheless, the delta record likely represents the most reliable record of basin-wide weathering response to climate change. © 2012 University of Washington.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Quaternary Research
First Page
368
Last Page
381
Recommended Citation
Alizai, A., Hillier, S., Clift, P., Giosan, L., Hurst, A., VanLaningham, S., & Macklin, M. (2012). Clay mineral variations in Holocene terrestrial sediments from the Indus Basin. Quaternary Research, 77 (3), 368-381. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yqres.2012.01.008