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Mainz 2017 – scientific programme

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MS: Fachverband Massenspektrometrie

MS 9: Accelerator Mass Spectrometry and Applications II

MS 9.8: Talk

Thursday, March 9, 2017, 16:15–16:30, RW 2

Mass spectrometry and the evolution of the western Namibian drainage systems — •Andreas Gärtner1, Ulf Linnemann1, Silke Merchel2, Samuel Niedermann3, Axel Gerdes4, Georg Rugel2, Andreas Scharf2, Loic Le Bras2, Mandy Hofmann1, and Johannes Zieger11SNSD, Geochronologie, Dresden, Germany — 2HZDR, Dresden, Germany — 3GFZ, Potsdam, Germany — 4JWG-Universität Frankfurt, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Frankfurt, Germany

Our multi-method MS study (AMS, noble gas MS, LA-(MC)-ICP-MS) aims to constrain the evolution of the western Namibian drainages since the last ca. 40 Ma. Therefore, fluvial sediments of several rivers and their precursors were sampled. In order to obtain precise surface exposure ages of the various terrace levels, the routinely used cosmogenic nuclides 10Be, 21Ne, 26Al (quartz), and 36Cl (calcite) were applied either on surface samples or on depth-profiles consisting of 3 to 5 samples each. U-Pb small scale isochrone (SSI) ages of calcareous matrices were also used for terrace dating. Sedimentary provenances were revealed by detrital zircon (ZrSiO4) geochronology using U-Th-Pb and Lu-Hf isotope systematics. They indicate varying detrital zircon patterns through time. Our approach facilitates the recognition of changes in the fluvial sediment provenance at certain points in time. Such combined studies have a huge potential for revealing the palaeohydrological history, and to estimate amplitudes and processing speeds of past events or changing sizes of catchment areas, which is of particular interest for modelling the palaeoclimate and palaeogeography.

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