The hydrological setting, occurrence and significance of gypsum in late Quaternary salt lakes in South Australia
- 1 October 1982
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Sedimentology
- Vol. 29 (5) , 609-637
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3091.1982.tb00071.x
Abstract
Well exposed, often laminated gypsum sequences occur in many Quarternary salt lakes in southern South Australia. The gypsum in the salt lakes is classified by increasing grain size into gypsite, gypsarenite and selenite. The salt lakes are classified by age and hydrological setting into coastal salinas which are Holocene sea‐water fed groundwater lakes, and continental playas which are late Pleistocene endorheic basins. A study of the relationships between coastal salina hydrology and the associated gypsum deposition has shown the different types of gypsum form under distinct hydrological regimes. As the hydrology above a coastal salina depositional surface changes through time so does the type of gypsum deposited. Application of a gypsum depositional model derived from a study of the coastal salina gypsum to those portions of a continental playa gypsum unit where deposition is no longer occurring confirms the applicability of the model to non‐salina gypsum deposits.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isotope geochemistry of some Messinian evaporates: Paleoenvironmental implicationsPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 1979
- Section 3 ENVIRONMENTS OF SUBAQUEOUS GYPSUM DEPOSITIONPublished by Society for Sedimentary Geology ,1978
- Environmental setting and microstructure of subfossil lithified stromatolites associated with evaporites, Marion Lake, South AustraliaSedimentology, 1977
- Algal crusts, autochthonous and clastic gypsum in a cannibalistic evaporite basin: a case history from the Messinian of Northern ApenninesSedimentology, 1977
- Astronomical Theory of Climatic Change: Support from New GuineaScience, 1970