Title
Clay mineral composition of river sediments in the Amazon Basin
Date Issued
15 October 2007
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Jouanneau J.M.
Soares L.
Boaventura G.R.
Maillet N.
Lagane C.
Institut de Recherche Pour Le Développement
Abstract
Clay minerals are important in evaluating the maturity of suspended sediments, weathering intensity and source area. However, there are processes that can change the mineral assemblage such as river transportation, deposition, remobilization and tributary inputs. In terms of water discharge and sediment yield, the Amazon is one of the largest rivers in the world. Most of the suspended sediments come from the Andes, crossing the lowlands before reaching the ocean. This study measures the spatial distribution of clay mineral assemblages over the entire Amazon basin. The results obtained show the main features of the Amazon River main stem and larger tributaries from their sources to their confluence. Clay mineral composition highlights the evolution of the Madeira and Marañón-Solimões River, which start in the Andes with high illite + chlorite content. Downstream, smectite contents increase. Moreover, all shield tributaries show high kaolinite content. The lower Amazon River is characterized by relative high smectite content, different from the Andean sources. The clay mineral results show that suspended sediments of the Amazon River have three main sources: 1) the Andes mountains; 2) the Amazon shields and 3) the Piedmont basins, especially the Pastaza alluvial megafan and the Fitzcarrald Arch basin. Lateral bank erosion plays also a significant role, by the introduction of more mature sediments into the river, enriched in smectite. © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Start page
340
End page
356
Volume
71
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos Geología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-34548427324
Source
Catena
ISSN of the container
03418162
Sponsor(s)
All field sampling was part of the HYBAM Program ( www.mpl.ird.fr/hybam ), and the clay analysis was shared between the Universities of Brasília (Brazil), Bordeaux and Toulouse (France). Our deepest thanks to our numerous traveling companions, along the Amazonian rivers or on the Andean tracks, without whom this database could not have existed. Lastly, we thank Patrice Baby for his useful comments concerning geology of the Amazon basin. We also thank the CNPq Agency for Brazil for the financial support brought to this study (PhD grant for Leonildes Soares).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus