Holocene Evolution of the Northeastern Corner of the Nile Delta
- 1 September 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 26 (2) , 194-206
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(86)90104-3
Abstract
The constructive phase of the modern Nile Delta, as manifested in a 48-m section drilled east of the Suez Canal, commenced in very early Holocene times. Sands rich in marine fauna were deposited in the littoral zone and the shoreline was more than 20 km landward of its present-day position. Subsequently, clays and silts were dumped from the Nile distributaries and the marine faunal spectrum became very limited and brackish. Later in early and middle Holocene times the sediments deposited were rich in freshwater, delta-plain diatoms and pollen and in allochthonous fern spores from the tropics, indicating proximity of a distributary mouth. The middle part of the section (22.5-17.5 m) is very poor in faunal and floral remains; pollen grains from sabkha vegetation are abundant. The environment, which seems lagoonal and slightly hypersaline, is related to the sea regression in middle Holocene times. Euryhaline pelecypods, dating from about 3000 yr B.P., are abundant around the 8-m depth. Upward, there is an increase in pollen grains from sabkhas; the section is poor in diatoms and those present are mostly euryhaline and lagoonal. Allochthonous spores derived from the nearby Pelusiac Branch are abundant. Between 3000 and 2000 yr B.P. the constructive phase of the modern delta terminated and winnowed sands began accreting in front of the delta plain.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- After the deluge: Mediterranean stagnation and sapropel formationNature, 1982
- Morphology and dynamic sedimentology of the eastern Nile delta shelfMarine Geology, 1981
- Late Quaternary history of the NileNature, 1980
- Palaeo-oceanography of the post-glacial Eastern MediterraneanNature, 1979
- Ionian Sea sapropel distribution and late Quaternary palaeoceanography in the eastern MediterraneanNature, 1978
- Nile Delta: Nature and evolution of continental shelf sedimentsMarine Geology, 1978
- Heavy Minerals and the Evolution of the Modern NileQuaternary Research, 1976
- Nile Delta: The Defunct Pelusiac Branch IdentifiedScience, 1973
- Palaeolithic Remains in Upper EgyptNature, 1967
- A Late-Glacial and Post-Glacial Climatic Correlation between East Africa and EuropeNature, 1962