The eastern branch of the East African Rift System hosts many shallow modern lakes and paleolakes, which can be sensitive recorders of changing climate conditions (complicated by tectonics) during the past few million years. However, many of such lakes are saline–alkaline (salty and high pH), and these conditions do not easily preserve pollen and other biologically derived paleoclimate indicators. Fortunately, some preserved minerals that formed in these extreme environments reflect subtle shifts in lake water chemistry (controlled by changes in climate conditions) and therefore provide a continuous record of local and regional climate change. We present two different mineral proxies (zeolites and clays) from two different paleolake basins (Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, and Chew Bahir, Ethiopia) as examples.
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Research Article|
April 01, 2023
Paleolakes of Eastern Africa: Zeolites, Clay Minerals, and Climate
Lindsay J. McHenry;
Department of Geosciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA
E-mail: [email protected]
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Verena Foerster;
Institute of Geography Education, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
E-mail: [email protected]
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Daniel Gebregiorgis
Department of Geosciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
E-mail: [email protected]
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Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America
First Online:
20 Jun 2023
Online ISSN: 1811-5217
Print ISSN: 1811-5209
Copyright © 2023 by the Mineralogical Society of America
Mineralogical Society of America
Elements (2023) 19 (2): 96–103.
Article history
First Online:
20 Jun 2023
Citation
Lindsay J. McHenry, Verena Foerster, Daniel Gebregiorgis; Paleolakes of Eastern Africa: Zeolites, Clay Minerals, and Climate. Elements 2023;; 19 (2): 96–103. doi: https://doi.org/10.2138/gselements.19.2.96
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- Africa
- authigenic minerals
- Cenozoic
- clay minerals
- cores
- East Africa
- East African Rift
- Ethiopia
- framework silicates
- Holocene
- hydrochemistry
- lacustrine environment
- lake sediments
- lithostratigraphy
- middle Holocene
- mineral assemblages
- mineral composition
- Neogene
- Olduvai Gorge
- paleoclimatology
- paleoenvironment
- paleohydrology
- paleolakes
- paleolimnology
- paleosalinity
- Pleistocene
- Pliocene
- Quaternary
- sediments
- sheet silicates
- silicates
- Tanzania
- Tertiary
- X-ray diffraction data
- zeolite group
- Lake Chew Bahir
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