Title of article :
Development and persistence of an African mire: How the oldest South African fen has survived in a marginal climate
Author/Authors :
Grundling، نويسنده , , P. and Grootjans، نويسنده , , A.P. and Price، نويسنده , , J.S. and Ellery، نويسنده , , W.N.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Hydrological processes maintain wetlands, whose position in the landscape determines their character and possible response to climate change. We studied such responses to long periods of climate change in a large groundwater fed fen (Mfabeni Mire), which is one of the oldest fen systems in South Africa. The geological and geomorphological setting of the mire was studied as well as its stratigraphy and chronology. The basal peat of the mire was at a depth of 9.9 m dated at ca. 44,000 cal years Before Present (BP). The average accumulation rate during the Late Pleistocene was 0.15 mm/year. During the Holocene it was higher (0.3 mm/year). Despite climate change over this period, peat formation has hardly been interrupted, suggesting that the system has been able to almost continuously sustain peat formation processes. This is possible because the peatland is situated in a valley that is bordered by a highly permeable sand dune cordon with an elevated groundwater table that directs groundwater towards the mire. The infilling of the valley by peat has resulted in a basin with lower permeability than in the surrounding dunes, forcing the water table in the adjacent aquifer to rise, thus ensuring the mire system a supply of groundwater that is large enough to dampen the effects of climatic variation.
Keywords :
coastal dunes , geology , Hydrology , mire , Peat , Radio carbon dating