Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/4193
Title: Boron content of Lake Ulubat sediment: A key to interpret the morphological history of NW Anatolia, Turkey
Authors: Kazancı, N
Toprak, O
Leroy, SAG
Öncel, S
Ileri, O
Emre, O
Costa, PJM
Erturac, K
McGee, E
Issue Date: 2005
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Applied Geochemistry. 21 (1) 134-151
Abstract: Freshwater Lake Ulubat (c. 1.5 m deep and c. 138 km2) receives sediment from a 10.414 km2 area in the seismically active Susurluk Drainage Basin (SDB) of NW Turkey. The B and trace element contents of the lake infill seem to be a link between the fresh landforms of the SDB and the lacustrine sediment. Deposition in Lake Ulubat has been 1.60 cm.a-1 for the last 50 a according to radionucleides; however the sedimentation rate over the last millennium was 0.37 cm.a-1 based on 14C dating. The B content of the lacustrine infill displays a slight increase at 0.50 m and a drastic increase at 4 m depth occurring c. 31 a and c. 1070 a ago respectively. Probably the topmost change corresponds to the start of open mining in the SDB and the second one to the natural trenching of borate ore-deposits. These dates also show indirectly a 1.4 cm.a-1 erosion rate during the last millennium as the borate beds were trenched up to 15 m. By extrapolation, it is possible to establish that the formation of some of the present morphological features of the southern Marmara region, especially river incision, began in the late Pleistocene, and developed especially over the last 75 ka.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/4193
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Institute for the Environment

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