The Palaeo-Kambaniru river mouth, Sumba, East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia: A record of strongly seasonal catastrophic flow in a monsoon-controlled deltaic complex

John-Paul Zonneveld, Yahdi Zaim, Yan Rizal, Aswan Aswan, Anne Fortuin, Roy Larick, Russell L. Ciochon

Abstract


The Kambaniru River valley near the city of Waingapu preserves a thick succession of coarse-grained fluvial-deltaic sediment deposited during the Late Pleistocene. This succession incises through a thick uplifted coral reef terrace succession and records intervals of highly episodic flow events during the last glacial interval. The occurrence of intraclastic, coarse sand/gravel matrix olistostromes in several areas attests to the occasionally catastrophic nature of flow in the ancestral Kambaniru River. Small to moderate-sized coral-rich reefs and laterally restricted reef terraces occur on delta-front conglomerate successions at multiple horizons through the study interval. These reefs record both intervals of low flow as well as periodic river-mouth avulsion episodes. Comparison of radiometric dates obtained from pelecypod and coral material from both deltaic successions and laterally adjacent coral reef terrace intervals indicates that uplift/subsidence history of the terraces differs from that of the valley and that correlation between the two should be taken with care.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Abdullah, C.I., Rampnoux, J-P., Bellon, H., Maury, R.C. and Soeria-Atmadja, R., 2000. The evolution of Sumba Island (Indonesia) revisited in the light of new data on the geochronology and geochemistry of the magmatic rocks. Jour. of Asian E. Sci, v. 18, p. 533-546.

Bard, E., Jouannic, C., Hamelin, B., Pirazzoli, P.A., Arnold, M., Faure, G., Sumosusastro, P. and Syaefudin, 1996. Pleistocene sea levels and tectonic uplift based on dating of corals from Sumba Island, Indonesia. Geophys. Res. Let., v. 23, p. 1473-1476.

Fortuin, A.R., Van der Werff, W. and Wensink, H., 1997. Neogene basin history and paleomagnetism of a rifted and inverted forearc region, on- and offshore Sumba, Eastern Indonesia. Jour. Asian E. Sci, v. 15, p. 61-88.

Hobgen, S.E., Myers, B.A., Fisher, R.P. and Wasson, R.J., 2014. Creating a sediment budget in a data poor context: an example from eastern Indonesia. Geograf. Ann.: Ser. A., Phys. Geog., v. 96, p. 513-530.

Nexer, M., Authemayou, C., Schildgen, T., Hantoro, W., Molliex, S., Delcaillau, B., Pedoja, K., Husson, L. and Regard, V., 2015. Evaluation of morphometric proxies for uplift on sequences of coral reef terraces: a case study from Sumba Island. Geomorph. v. 241, p. 145-159.

Pirazzoli, P.A., Radtke, U., Hantoro, W.S. Jouannic, C., Hoang, C.T., Causse, C. and Best, M.B., 1991. Quaternary raised coral-reef terraces on Sumba Island, Indonesia. Science, v. 252, p. 1834-1836.

Pirazzoli, P.A., Radtke, U., Hantoro, W.S. Jouannic, C., Hoang, C.T., Causse, C. and Best, M.B., 1993. A one million-year-long sequence of marine terraces on Sumba Island, Indonesia. Mar. Geol. v. 109, p. 221-236.

Riggs, J.W.D. and Hall, R., 2011. Structural and stratigraphic evolution of the Savu Basin, Indonesia, In Hall, R., Cottam, M.A., and Wilson, M.E.J. (Editors), The southeast Asian gateway: history and tectonics of the Australia-Asia collision. Geological Society Special Publications, v. 355, p. 225-240.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.51835/bsed.2021.47.3.360

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Published By:

      

The Indonesian Sedimentologists Forum (FOSI)
The Indonesian Association of Geologists (IAGI)


Creative Commons License
Berita Sedimentologi is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.