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The late Cenozoic evolution of coastal water bodies in Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa

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The late Cenozoic evolution of coastal water bodies in Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa

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Abstract

Three large coastal water bodies (St Lucia, Sibaya and Kosi) of markedly different contemporary morphology occur on the eastern margin of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain, South Africa. This paper examines their Late Cenozoic evolution and investigates the controls on their evolution that have produced the observed differences in morphology. All three systems origins were due to Mio-Pliocene low sea-level still stands allowing rivers to scour channels into Cretaceous and Palaeocene sedimentary sequences. During the Last Interglacial (oxygen-isotope stage 5e), sea level was approximately 5m above present level and the morphology of the three systems was similar. An offshore barrier archipelago partially isolated a back-barrier environment that comprised intertidal sand-flats, localised reefs and tidal channels. The area around Bazaruto Island, Mozambique, provides a modern analogy. River rejuvenation and associated incision up to and during the Last Glacial Maximum (16 000–18 000BP) caused a minimum of −40m scour which is still reflected in the bathymetry of Lake Sibaya and Kosi. Accumulation of barrier sands partly against pre-existing Interglacial barrier remnants during the Holocene marine transgression (16 000–4500BP, Ramsay, P.J., 1995. 9000 Years of sea-level change along the South African coastline, Quaternary Int. 27, 1–5.) was responsible for lagoon isolation, although the extent and nature of separation from the sea varies markedly between the systems. The northern part of Lake St. Lucia was closed from the sea during the late Holocene, probably during a sea-level fall from a Holocene high stand of ca. 3m, at 3000BP. The Kosi system had a late Pleistocene to early Holocene outlet situated at Bhanga Nek, Lake Nhlange, but this inlet mouth closed approximately at 3000BP. The present mouth was established by 1600BP. Lagoonal conditions within Lake Sibaya terminated ca. 5000BP when coastal barrier dune formation caused complete impoundment and enabled the lake water level to rise to 20m above mean sea-level. Lake St. Lucia's large catchment has meant that fluvial sediment input has kept pace with the Holocene transgression, whereas the localised drainage associated with Sibaya and Kosi has resulted in a negligible fluvial sediment input allowing for deep lacustrine conditions to develop. Lagoonal segmentation is present to some extent in each system as a result of mobile coastal sediments and their reworking by short-period wind waves. The differential stages of lagoonal segmentation in the three systems can be explained by (a) the presence of cohesive sediment and bedrock around St Lucia which reduce shoreline mobility, and (b) the great water depths in Sibaya compared to Kosi which require longer periods of infilling before segmentation is complete

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DOI: 10.1016/S0025-3227(00)00032-3

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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="eng">Three large coastal water bodies (St Lucia, Sibaya and Kosi) of markedly different contemporary morphology occur on the eastern margin of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain, South Africa. This paper examines their Late Cenozoic evolution and investigates the controls on their evolution that have produced the observed differences in morphology. All three systems origins were due to Mio-Pliocene low sea-level still stands allowing rivers to scour channels into Cretaceous and Palaeocene sedimentary sequences. During the Last Interglacial (oxygen-isotope stage 5e), sea level was approximately 5m above present level and the morphology of the three systems was similar. An offshore barrier archipelago partially isolated a back-barrier environment that comprised intertidal sand-flats, localised reefs and tidal channels. The area around Bazaruto Island, Mozambique, provides a modern analogy. River rejuvenation and associated incision up to and during the Last Glacial Maximum (16 000–18 000BP) caused a minimum of −40m scour which is still reflected in the bathymetry of Lake Sibaya and Kosi. Accumulation of barrier sands partly against pre-existing Interglacial barrier remnants during the Holocene marine transgression (16 000–4500BP, Ramsay, P.J., 1995. 9000 Years of sea-level change along the South African coastline, Quaternary Int. 27, 1–5.) was responsible for lagoon isolation, although the extent and nature of separation from the sea varies markedly between the systems. The northern part of Lake St. Lucia was closed from the sea during the late Holocene, probably during a sea-level fall from a Holocene high stand of ca. 3m, at 3000BP. The Kosi system had a late Pleistocene to early Holocene outlet situated at Bhanga Nek, Lake Nhlange, but this inlet mouth closed approximately at 3000BP. The present mouth was established by 1600BP. Lagoonal conditions within Lake Sibaya terminated ca. 5000BP when coastal barrier dune formation caused complete impoundment and enabled the lake water level to rise to 20m above mean sea-level. Lake St. Lucia's large catchment has meant that fluvial sediment input has kept pace with the Holocene transgression, whereas the localised drainage associated with Sibaya and Kosi has resulted in a negligible fluvial sediment input allowing for deep lacustrine conditions to develop. Lagoonal segmentation is present to some extent in each system as a result of mobile coastal sediments and their reworking by short-period wind waves. The differential stages of lagoonal segmentation in the three systems can be explained by (a) the presence of cohesive sediment and bedrock around St Lucia which reduce shoreline mobility, and (b) the great water depths in Sibaya compared to Kosi which require longer periods of infilling before segmentation is complete </div>
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<note type="content">Fig. 1: The regional locality of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain showing the coastal water bodies.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 2: The geomorphology of the Kosi system which comprises a series of interconnected lakes that become progressively more saline towards the inlet mouth. A and B refer to 3.5kHz seismic lines as depicted in Fig. 6.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 3: Lake Sibaya local geomorphology. Note the preserved palaeofluvial channels depicted in the lake bathymetry.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 4: A geomorphological map of the St.Lucia system showing the Last Glacial Maximum palaeotopography that has been incorporated from unpublished data from Sydow and Van Heerden (1988).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 5: The Last Glacial Maximum oxygen isotope stage 2 (A) and Last Interglacial oxygen isotope stage 5e (B) topography of the Kosi system.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 6: 3.5kHz seismic line 1 (A) and seismic line 2 (B) through the Northern Channel (Fig. 2) of Lake Nhlange showing the Quaternary depositional history. Limited lake infilling is due to slumping of margin sand into the deeper areas (Wright et al., 1999).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 7: A combined contour map of the palaeoland surface 1 (Ps1) overlain by the present Lake Nhlange bathymetry showing the limited amount of Quaternary infilling.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 8: Major morphological features of the Kosi system showing beach-ridges and large-scale sedimentary structures within Lake Nhlange and Mpungwini that aere assisting in the segmentation and shallowing process (Wright et al., 1999).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 9: The Last Glacial Maximum oxygen isotope stage 2 (A) and Last Interglacial oxygen isotope stage 5e (B) topography of the St. Lucia system.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 10: A map of the Bazaruto Archipelago, central Mozambique, showing the offshore barrier complex that provides a modern analogy for the environments at Lake St. Lucia and Kosi during the Last Interglacial.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 11: An idealised cross-section through Lake Nhlange showing the Cenozoic stratigraphy through the offshore, barrier and backbarrier environment.</note>
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<ce:copyright type="full-transfer" year="2000">Elsevier Science B.V.</ce:copyright>
</item-info>
<head>
<ce:title>The late Cenozoic evolution of coastal water bodies in Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa</ce:title>
<ce:author-group>
<ce:author>
<ce:given-name>C.I.</ce:given-name>
<ce:surname>Wright</ce:surname>
<ce:cross-ref refid="AFF1">
<ce:sup>a</ce:sup>
</ce:cross-ref>
<ce:cross-ref refid="CORR1">*</ce:cross-ref>
<ce:e-address>ian@geobell.org.za</ce:e-address>
</ce:author>
<ce:author>
<ce:given-name>W.R.</ce:given-name>
<ce:surname>Miller</ce:surname>
<ce:cross-ref refid="AFF2">
<ce:sup>b</ce:sup>
</ce:cross-ref>
<ce:e-address>millerw@geology.und.ac.za</ce:e-address>
</ce:author>
<ce:author>
<ce:given-name>J.A.G.</ce:given-name>
<ce:surname>Cooper</ce:surname>
<ce:cross-ref refid="AFF3">
<ce:sup>c</ce:sup>
</ce:cross-ref>
<ce:e-address>jag.cooper@ulst.ac.uk</ce:e-address>
</ce:author>
<ce:affiliation id="AFF1">
<ce:label>a</ce:label>
<ce:textfn>Deputy Manager, Marine Geoscience Unit, Council for Geoscience, PO Box 572, Bellville 7535, South Africa</ce:textfn>
</ce:affiliation>
<ce:affiliation id="AFF2">
<ce:label>b</ce:label>
<ce:textfn>Joint Council for Geoscience—University of Natal, Marine Geoscience Unit, Department of Geology and Computer Science, University of Natal, PO Box 18091, Dalbridge 4014, South Africa</ce:textfn>
</ce:affiliation>
<ce:affiliation id="AFF3">
<ce:label>c</ce:label>
<ce:textfn>Coastal Studies Research Group, School of Environmental Studies, University of Ulster, Coleraine BT52 1SA, Northern Ireland</ce:textfn>
</ce:affiliation>
<ce:correspondence id="CORR1">
<ce:label>*</ce:label>
<ce:text>Corresponding author. Tel.: +27-21-9484754/5/6/7; fax: +27-21-9488788</ce:text>
</ce:correspondence>
</ce:author-group>
<ce:date-received day="7" month="4" year="1999"></ce:date-received>
<ce:date-accepted day="3" month="3" year="2000"></ce:date-accepted>
<ce:abstract>
<ce:section-title>Abstract</ce:section-title>
<ce:abstract-sec>
<ce:simple-para>Three large coastal water bodies (St Lucia, Sibaya and Kosi) of markedly different contemporary morphology occur on the eastern margin of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain, South Africa. This paper examines their Late Cenozoic evolution and investigates the controls on their evolution that have produced the observed differences in morphology.</ce:simple-para>
<ce:simple-para>All three systems origins were due to Mio-Pliocene low sea-level still stands allowing rivers to scour channels into Cretaceous and Palaeocene sedimentary sequences. During the Last Interglacial (oxygen-isotope stage 5e), sea level was approximately 5
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
m above present level and the morphology of the three systems was similar. An offshore barrier archipelago partially isolated a back-barrier environment that comprised intertidal sand-flats, localised reefs and tidal channels. The area around Bazaruto Island, Mozambique, provides a modern analogy. River rejuvenation and associated incision up to and during the Last Glacial Maximum (16 000–18 000
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP) caused a minimum of −40
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
m scour which is still reflected in the bathymetry of Lake Sibaya and Kosi. Accumulation of barrier sands partly against pre-existing Interglacial barrier remnants during the Holocene marine transgression (16 000–4500
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP, Ramsay, P.J., 1995. 9000 Years of sea-level change along the South African coastline, Quaternary Int. 27, 1–5.) was responsible for lagoon isolation, although the extent and nature of separation from the sea varies markedly between the systems.</ce:simple-para>
<ce:simple-para>The northern part of Lake St. Lucia was closed from the sea during the late Holocene, probably during a sea-level fall from a Holocene high stand of ca. 3
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
m, at 3000
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP. The Kosi system had a late Pleistocene to early Holocene outlet situated at Bhanga Nek, Lake Nhlange, but this inlet mouth closed approximately at 3000
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP. The present mouth was established by 1600
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP. Lagoonal conditions within Lake Sibaya terminated ca. 5000
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
BP when coastal barrier dune formation caused complete impoundment and enabled the lake water level to rise to 20
<ce:hsp sp="0.25"></ce:hsp>
m above mean sea-level. Lake St. Lucia's large catchment has meant that fluvial sediment input has kept pace with the Holocene transgression, whereas the localised drainage associated with Sibaya and Kosi has resulted in a negligible fluvial sediment input allowing for deep lacustrine conditions to develop.</ce:simple-para>
<ce:simple-para>Lagoonal segmentation is present to some extent in each system as a result of mobile coastal sediments and their reworking by short-period wind waves. The differential stages of lagoonal segmentation in the three systems can be explained by (a) the presence of cohesive sediment and bedrock around St Lucia which reduce shoreline mobility, and (b) the great water depths in Sibaya compared to Kosi which require longer periods of infilling before segmentation is complete</ce:simple-para>
</ce:abstract-sec>
</ce:abstract>
<ce:keywords class="keyword" xml:lang="en">
<ce:section-title>Keywords</ce:section-title>
<ce:keyword>
<ce:text>Northern Kwazulu-Natal water bodies</ce:text>
</ce:keyword>
<ce:keyword>
<ce:text>Late Cenozoic evolution</ce:text>
</ce:keyword>
<ce:keyword>
<ce:text>Lagoonal segmentation</ce:text>
</ce:keyword>
</ce:keywords>
</head>
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<title>The late Cenozoic evolution of coastal water bodies in Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa</title>
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<title>The late Cenozoic evolution of coastal water bodies in Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa</title>
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<affiliation>aDeputy Manager, Marine Geoscience Unit, Council for Geoscience, PO Box 572, Bellville 7535, South Africa</affiliation>
<affiliation>Deputy Manager, Marine Geoscience Unit, Council for Geoscience, PO Box 572, Bellville 7535, South Africa</affiliation>
<affiliation>Corresponding author. Tel.: +27-21-9484754/5/6/7; fax: +27-21-9488788</affiliation>
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<affiliation>Joint Council for Geoscience—University of Natal, Marine Geoscience Unit, Department of Geology and Computer Science, University of Natal, PO Box 18091, Dalbridge 4014, South Africa</affiliation>
<affiliation>E-mail: ian@geobell.org.za</affiliation>
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<affiliation>Coastal Studies Research Group, School of Environmental Studies, University of Ulster, Coleraine BT52 1SA, Northern Ireland</affiliation>
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<abstract lang="eng">Three large coastal water bodies (St Lucia, Sibaya and Kosi) of markedly different contemporary morphology occur on the eastern margin of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain, South Africa. This paper examines their Late Cenozoic evolution and investigates the controls on their evolution that have produced the observed differences in morphology. All three systems origins were due to Mio-Pliocene low sea-level still stands allowing rivers to scour channels into Cretaceous and Palaeocene sedimentary sequences. During the Last Interglacial (oxygen-isotope stage 5e), sea level was approximately 5m above present level and the morphology of the three systems was similar. An offshore barrier archipelago partially isolated a back-barrier environment that comprised intertidal sand-flats, localised reefs and tidal channels. The area around Bazaruto Island, Mozambique, provides a modern analogy. River rejuvenation and associated incision up to and during the Last Glacial Maximum (16 000–18 000BP) caused a minimum of −40m scour which is still reflected in the bathymetry of Lake Sibaya and Kosi. Accumulation of barrier sands partly against pre-existing Interglacial barrier remnants during the Holocene marine transgression (16 000–4500BP, Ramsay, P.J., 1995. 9000 Years of sea-level change along the South African coastline, Quaternary Int. 27, 1–5.) was responsible for lagoon isolation, although the extent and nature of separation from the sea varies markedly between the systems. The northern part of Lake St. Lucia was closed from the sea during the late Holocene, probably during a sea-level fall from a Holocene high stand of ca. 3m, at 3000BP. The Kosi system had a late Pleistocene to early Holocene outlet situated at Bhanga Nek, Lake Nhlange, but this inlet mouth closed approximately at 3000BP. The present mouth was established by 1600BP. Lagoonal conditions within Lake Sibaya terminated ca. 5000BP when coastal barrier dune formation caused complete impoundment and enabled the lake water level to rise to 20m above mean sea-level. Lake St. Lucia's large catchment has meant that fluvial sediment input has kept pace with the Holocene transgression, whereas the localised drainage associated with Sibaya and Kosi has resulted in a negligible fluvial sediment input allowing for deep lacustrine conditions to develop. Lagoonal segmentation is present to some extent in each system as a result of mobile coastal sediments and their reworking by short-period wind waves. The differential stages of lagoonal segmentation in the three systems can be explained by (a) the presence of cohesive sediment and bedrock around St Lucia which reduce shoreline mobility, and (b) the great water depths in Sibaya compared to Kosi which require longer periods of infilling before segmentation is complete </abstract>
<note type="content">Fig. 1: The regional locality of the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain showing the coastal water bodies.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 2: The geomorphology of the Kosi system which comprises a series of interconnected lakes that become progressively more saline towards the inlet mouth. A and B refer to 3.5kHz seismic lines as depicted in Fig. 6.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 3: Lake Sibaya local geomorphology. Note the preserved palaeofluvial channels depicted in the lake bathymetry.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 4: A geomorphological map of the St.Lucia system showing the Last Glacial Maximum palaeotopography that has been incorporated from unpublished data from Sydow and Van Heerden (1988).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 5: The Last Glacial Maximum oxygen isotope stage 2 (A) and Last Interglacial oxygen isotope stage 5e (B) topography of the Kosi system.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 6: 3.5kHz seismic line 1 (A) and seismic line 2 (B) through the Northern Channel (Fig. 2) of Lake Nhlange showing the Quaternary depositional history. Limited lake infilling is due to slumping of margin sand into the deeper areas (Wright et al., 1999).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 7: A combined contour map of the palaeoland surface 1 (Ps1) overlain by the present Lake Nhlange bathymetry showing the limited amount of Quaternary infilling.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 8: Major morphological features of the Kosi system showing beach-ridges and large-scale sedimentary structures within Lake Nhlange and Mpungwini that aere assisting in the segmentation and shallowing process (Wright et al., 1999).</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 9: The Last Glacial Maximum oxygen isotope stage 2 (A) and Last Interglacial oxygen isotope stage 5e (B) topography of the St. Lucia system.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 10: A map of the Bazaruto Archipelago, central Mozambique, showing the offshore barrier complex that provides a modern analogy for the environments at Lake St. Lucia and Kosi during the Last Interglacial.</note>
<note type="content">Fig. 11: An idealised cross-section through Lake Nhlange showing the Cenozoic stratigraphy through the offshore, barrier and backbarrier environment.</note>
<subject lang="eng">
<genre>Keywords</genre>
<topic>Northern Kwazulu-Natal water bodies</topic>
<topic>Late Cenozoic evolution</topic>
<topic>Lagoonal segmentation</topic>
</subject>
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