Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating

<p>Sand dunes in the Thar Desert, owing to their location in the Indian summer monsoonal (ISM) regime, are rich archives of past geomorphological and palaeoenvironmental changes. However, existing dune records are not robust enough to allow their assessment and integration with a growing mult...

Disgrifiad llawn

Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Srivastava, A
Awduron Eraill: Thomas, DSG
Fformat: Traethawd Ymchwil
Iaith:English
Cyhoeddwyd: 2019
Pynciau:
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author Srivastava, A
author2 Thomas, DSG
author_facet Thomas, DSG
Srivastava, A
author_sort Srivastava, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>Sand dunes in the Thar Desert, owing to their location in the Indian summer monsoonal (ISM) regime, are rich archives of past geomorphological and palaeoenvironmental changes. However, existing dune records are not robust enough to allow their assessment and integration with a growing multiproxy framework of palaeoenvironmental change. Therefore, with an aim to <em>investigate the timing of dune activity in the Thar</em>, three research questions are answered in this thesis: (i) what are the key phases of dune activity; (ii) what is the effect of anthropogenic influences on the landscape; and (iii) how can dune chronologies be interpreted most effectively to reconstruct late Quaternary environmental changes? To answer these, systematic sampling of multiple dunes was carried out in the dunefields in the central and northern Thar, and luminescence dating was used to provide a detailed chronological framework.</p> <p>Results demonstrate that the Thar dunes are >58 ka old, with preserved accumulation phases throughout the Holocene at ~11.6-8.5, 4-3, 2-1, 0.6-0.2 and 0.07 ka. First records of modern net accumulation are presented, with rates varying between 2-5 m/year, attributable to anthropogenic disturbances. Dune accumulation intensity methodology, in conjunction with available highly-resolved marine and terrestrial datasets, is used to infer palaeoenvironmental changes in the Thar. Whilst the strengthening of the ISM has been evidently shown to have a significant influence on widespread dune accumulation in the early Holocene, equivocal relationships between both lake levels/dune accumulation and monsoon variability during later Holocene suggest a complex interplay of regional and more local drivers like sediment supply, lowered sea levels etc. The study concludes with emphasis on the importance of recognising external and local controls on dune systems, and demonstrates that diverse responses to same environmental stimuli should be expected in palaeoenvironmental reconstructions.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:b856d64d-86db-40f0-8d5e-b8e4aaafcaf02024-01-30T11:43:52ZLate Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence datingThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:b856d64d-86db-40f0-8d5e-b8e4aaafcaf0GeochronologyQuaternary ScienceGeomorphologyEnglishHyrax Deposit2019Srivastava, AThomas, DSGDurcan, JA <p>Sand dunes in the Thar Desert, owing to their location in the Indian summer monsoonal (ISM) regime, are rich archives of past geomorphological and palaeoenvironmental changes. However, existing dune records are not robust enough to allow their assessment and integration with a growing multiproxy framework of palaeoenvironmental change. Therefore, with an aim to <em>investigate the timing of dune activity in the Thar</em>, three research questions are answered in this thesis: (i) what are the key phases of dune activity; (ii) what is the effect of anthropogenic influences on the landscape; and (iii) how can dune chronologies be interpreted most effectively to reconstruct late Quaternary environmental changes? To answer these, systematic sampling of multiple dunes was carried out in the dunefields in the central and northern Thar, and luminescence dating was used to provide a detailed chronological framework.</p> <p>Results demonstrate that the Thar dunes are >58 ka old, with preserved accumulation phases throughout the Holocene at ~11.6-8.5, 4-3, 2-1, 0.6-0.2 and 0.07 ka. First records of modern net accumulation are presented, with rates varying between 2-5 m/year, attributable to anthropogenic disturbances. Dune accumulation intensity methodology, in conjunction with available highly-resolved marine and terrestrial datasets, is used to infer palaeoenvironmental changes in the Thar. Whilst the strengthening of the ISM has been evidently shown to have a significant influence on widespread dune accumulation in the early Holocene, equivocal relationships between both lake levels/dune accumulation and monsoon variability during later Holocene suggest a complex interplay of regional and more local drivers like sediment supply, lowered sea levels etc. The study concludes with emphasis on the importance of recognising external and local controls on dune systems, and demonstrates that diverse responses to same environmental stimuli should be expected in palaeoenvironmental reconstructions.</p>
spellingShingle Geochronology
Quaternary Science
Geomorphology
Srivastava, A
Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title_full Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title_fullStr Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title_full_unstemmed Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title_short Late Quaternary dune activity in the Thar Desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
title_sort late quaternary dune activity in the thar desert and its implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions an insight from optically stimulated luminescence dating
topic Geochronology
Quaternary Science
Geomorphology
work_keys_str_mv AT srivastavaa latequaternaryduneactivityinthethardesertanditsimplicationsforpalaeoenvironmentalreconstructionsaninsightfromopticallystimulatedluminescencedating