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Institute
The explosive expansion of the population of the Metropolitan Region of Curitiba raised a high increase in the demand for water resources and the uncontrolled settlement poses a large problem for the environment. The greatest menace to the water supply sources of this region is the urban occupation (invasion) into the areas that contain these resources. This occupation continues with its slow, silent, although progressive march, threatening precious and irreplaceable resources. From this background an area in the direct vicinity north-east of Curitiba has been studied. In this area a drinking water reservoir was constructed in the time that the study took place in the Iraí-basin. The Iraí-reservoir even though an area around the lake will be protected may be polluted by two tributaries which flow through more or less densely populated areas. In the study area on the same time wells have been constructed. To estimate what the impact may be from the possibly polluted reservoir on the aquifer a groundwater flow model has been constructed. On the same time to estimate the water balance and the spatial distribution of pollution vulnerability the hydrological model MODBIL has been used. Also other methods have been used to estimate the pollution vulnerability to make a comparison and because none of the methods takes every aspect into account. With the calibrated groundwater flow model for the situation before the construction of the Iraí-reservoir and after its construction, simple particle tracking transport models are constructed as scenarios how the water of the aquifer may be influenced.
The Mesosaurus Inland Sea covered, in the Late Paleozoic, vast areas (~5 Mio km2) of the SW-Gondwanan continental interior. Major depocentres are represented by the Karoo basins of SW-Africa and the Paraná Basin in South America. These areas were interconnected prior to the break-up of Gondwana and the subsequent opening of the South Atlantic Ocean. In Namibia and South Africa deposits of the Mesosaurus Inland Sea are preserved in the successions of the glacial Dwyka Group and the postglacial Ecca Group (Karoo Supergroup). These deposits comprise the major part of a 60-70 Ma depositional cycle and are the main focus of this study. The large-scale transgressive part of this cycle started in the Late Carboniferous with continental glacial deposits followed by marine glacial and postglacial inland sea deposits. During the Early Permian the Mesosaurus Inland Sea reached its greatest extent, which was accompanied by widespread deposition of Corg-rich sediments. The large scale regressive part is recorded by successions ranging from deep water offshore pelites and turbidite sandstones to shallow water shoreface and deltaic sandstones, deposited in a brackish environment. Shallow water inland sea sediments are in turn overlain by fluvio-lacustrine deposits, which are assigned to the Beaufort Group and form the upper part of the cycle. This successive change in the depositional environment from marine to brackish to freshwater is also reflected in the fossil record. During Dwyka times a marine association of the Gondwana faunal province was able to colonize parts of the Mesosaurus Inland Sea. Later, during lower Ecca times, the connection to the Panthalassan Ocean became insufficient to retain normal marine conditions, leading to strong faunal endemism in an isolated and brackish inland sea environ¬ment. The most well-known and widespread representatives of this endemic fauna are mesosaurid vertebrates and megadesmid bivalves. Numerous altered tuffs occur as interlayers within argillaceous sediments of the Dwyka and Ecca Group of southern Namibia. The vast majority of these altered tuffs are represented by soft and crumbly to hard and indurated, clay-mineral-rich, bentonitic layers. Another, much rarer type is represented by very hard, chert-like tuff layers, which are predominantly albitic in composition. Furthermore, tuff layers within the Gai-As Formation of the Huab area are rich in potassium feldspar and have a porcelain-like appearance. The diagenetically modified matrix is mainly crypto- to microcrystalline. Polished tuff specimen show, in some tuffs, plane lamination or bedding with two or more subunits forming a tuff layer. Some display a weakly developed lamination. Only in very rare cases were structures reminiscent of sedimentary micro-cross lamination observed. The sedimentary textures and structures of the tuffs indicate that they have been deposited mainly as distal ash-fall layers by suspension settling in water. Some may have also been deposited or modified under the influence of weak bottom currents. The primary, pyroclastic macro-components of the tuffs are mainly represented by crystals of quartz, plagio¬clase, and biotite. In some thin sections pseudo¬morphs after pyroxene or hornblende were observed. Euhedral zircon and apatite crystals were observed in almost every tuff. Vitric or formerly vitric macro-components are very rare. The matrix of the majority of the investigated tuffs is predominantly composed of clay minerals. However, the matrix of the tuffs originally consisted most probably of fine vitric ash particles. Soon after deposition the volcanic ash was diagenetically altered to smectitic clay minerals. At a later stage smectite was progressively replaced by illite under prograde conditions. Nowadays the matrix of the bentonitic tuffs is strongly illite-dominated and only in the softer tuff layers a minor smectite content can be detected. Both the primary macrocrystic components as well as the geochemistry of the altered tuffs indicate that their source magmas were mainly of intermediate composition. The abundance of splintery quartz and feldspar crystal fragments within the tuffs hints at a highly explosive plinian or phreatoplinian eruption style of the source volcanoes, which were most probably located within a subduction-related volcanic arc region along the southern margin of Gondwana. New single zircon U-Pb SHRIMP datings of tuff layers provide a much more reliable age control of the investigated sedimentary succession. U-Pb SHRIMP ages for tuff layers from the glaciogenic Dwyka Group in southwestern Africa range from 302.0 ± 3.0 to 297.1 ± 1.8 Ma. The basal part of the early post-glacial Prince Albert Formation is dated at around 290 Ma. SHRIMP ages for tuff layers from the upper part of the Prince Albert Formation, the Whitehill Formation, and the middle part of the Collingham Formation indicate that the Mesosaurus Sea reached its greatest extent at around 280 Ma.
In north-western Namibia the fills of the Karoo-Etendeka depositories can be subdivided into (1) a Carboniferous-Permian, (2) a Triassic-Jurassic and (3) a Cretaceous megasequence, each recording extensional periods related to successive rifting phases in the evolving South Atlantic. The tectonic environment of the depositories in north-western Namibia changes successively from the coast towards the continental interior, which is reflected by the facies distribution and the position of time-stratigraphic gaps. Close to the present-day coastline synsedimentary listric faults, trending parallel to the South Atlantic rift (N-S), caused the formation of wedge shaped sediment bodies. Here, the Karoo Supergroup is only represented by the Permian succession in the Huab area. A hiatus within the Permian can be recognised by the correlation with the main Karoo Basin in South Africa and the Brazilian Paraná Basin. This stratal gap correlates with a pre-Beaufort Group unconformity in the main Karoo Basin that might be related to an orogenic pulse in the Cape Fold Belt. The Permian succession itself is unconformably overlain by the Lower Cretaceous Etendeka Group. This hiatus extending from the Upper Permian to the Lower Cretaceous has probably been induced by a combination of rift shoulder uplift and additional crustal doming associated with Etendeka flood volcanism. The enhanced tectonism during the Early Cretaceous controlled accommodation space for the alluvial-fluvial and aeolian deposits of the lower Etendeka Group. Disconformities within those deposits and the overlying lava succession attribute to distinct phases of tectonic and volcanic activity heralding the South Atlantic breakup. Towards the south-east, the Karoo succession becomes successively more complete. In the vicinity of Mt. Brandberg Early Triassic strata (Middle Omingonde Formation) follow disconformably above the Upper Permian/Lowermost Triassic Doros Formation. The sedimentation there was essentially controlled by the SW-NE trending Damaraland Uplift. South of the Damaraland Uplift the SW-NE trending Waterberg-Omaruru Fault zone is interpreted as a sinistral oblique-slip fault that compartmentalised the South Atlantic rift. This fault controlled accommodation space of the entire Triassic Omingonde Formation and the Early Jurassic Etjo Formation in its associated pull-apart and transtension structures. A locally well developed angular unconformity defines a hiatus between the two formations. Correlation with the main Karoo Basin in South Africa confirms that this gap is of a regional extent and not only a local, fault induced feature. Furthermore, it might also correlate with an orogenic pulse of the Cape Fold Belt. In general, the Mesozoic megasequences record the long-lived history of the southern Atlantic rift evolution. Rifting has been controlled by orogenic pulses derived from the Samfrau active margin throughout the Mesozoic. The associated intracratonic E-W extension caused the formation of grabens and conjugated oblique-slip zones. The generation of voluminous flood basalts marks the climax of intracratonic extension that was accompanied by enhanced uplift of the rift shoulders.
Orogene Prozesse in kontinentalen Kollisionszonen werden in zwei- und dreidimensionalen numerischen Modellen auf Basis der Finite-Elemente Methode (FEM) untersucht. Dabei stehen die Verteilung der Deformation innerhalb der Modellkruste, die korrespondierenden Spannungsfelder und die aus Temperaturfelddaten und Partikelpfaden abgeleitete metamorphe Entwicklung von Krustengesteinen im Vordergrund. Die Studie gliedert sich in einen methodischen Teil, umfangreiche Parameterstudien und spezielle Anwendungen auf fossile und rezente Orogene. Kontinentale Kollisionszonen sind - insbesondere in den tieferen Krustenstockwerken – durch hohe Beträge penetrativer Deformation gekennzeichnet. Im methodischen Teil der Arbeit wird eine Technik vorgestellt, mit deren Hilfe Verformungen des beobachteten Umfangs mit dem auf rein LAGRANGEscher Formulierung basierenden kommerziellen FE-Programmpaket ANSYS® modelliert werden können. Die speziell für Fragestellungen orogener Krustendynamik entwickelten Programmpakete OROTRACK bzw. OROTRACK3D umfassen Neuvernetzungs- und Ergebnisverwaltungsalgorithmen, die eine Modellierung von Konvergenzbeträgen bis zu mehreren hundert Kilometern erlauben. Zusätzlich können mittels einer Schnittstelle zu Oberflächenmodellen die Folgen exogener Prozesse auf die orogene Dynamik berücksichtigt werden. Weitere Charakteristika der Modellierungstechnik sind eine vollständige thermomechanische Kopplung, die Anwendung differenzierter Materialeigenschaften für verschiedene Krustenstockwerke sowie die Möglichkeit, die Deformation - den lokal herrschenden Druck- und Temperaturbedingungen entsprechend - entweder durch spröde oder duktile Materialgesetze zu approximieren. Die zur Beschreibung eines Kollisionsszenarios aufgebrachten Randbedingungen basieren auf den Grundlagen eines Mantelsubduktionsmodells (Willett et al. 1993). In 2D-Modellen wird ebene Verformung in einem Schnitt durch die kontinentale Kruste zweier kollidierender Platten modelliert, die basal einer vom lithosphärischen Mantel aufgeprägten Verschiebung unterliegen. Wird der lithosphärische Mantel der linken Platte an einem Punkt S unter die rechte Platte subduziert, ergibt sich für den linken Modellteil eine horizontale Verschiebung der Modellbasis nach rechts, während im rechten Modellteil keine Verschiebung der Modellbasis erlaubt ist. Im Bereich des Punktes S kommt es zu einer Diskontinuität der basalen Geschwindigkeit und somit zu maximaler Deformation. In publizierten Kollisionsmodellen, die auf ähnlichen Ansätzen beruhen, wird häufig rein sprödes Materialverhalten angenommen oder der duktile Anteil der Kruste durch geringe Krustentemperaturen klein und hochviskos gehalten. Unter diesen Bedingungen kann eng auf das Orogenzentrum lokalisierte Deformation mit einem typischerweise bivergenten Strukturmuster abgebildet werden (Willett et al. 1993 u.a.). Demgegenüber beweist eine erste Reihe zweidimensionaler Parameterstudien eine starke Abhängigkeit des beobachteten Deformationsmusters von den herrschenden Krustentemperaturen und der Konvergenzrate. Bei höheren Krustentemperaturen bildet sich demnach ein Entkopplungshorizont an der Krustenbasis, der für die oberen Krustenstockwerke eine verbreiterte und diffuse Deformationszone bedingt und die erzielte Krustenverdickung limitiert. Über die Verformungsratenabhängigkeit des duktilen Materialverhaltens und den unterschiedlichen Grad thermischer Reequilibrierung innerhalb der verdickten Kruste haben Variationen der Konvergenzrate ähnliche Auswirkungen auf das orogene Deformationsmuster. Verbesserte Modelle mit Neuvernetzungstechnik werden in Parameterstudien getestet, die den Einfluss unterschiedlicher Temperatur-Viskositätsfunktionen auf die Lokalisierung der Deformation und die resultierende synkonvergente Exhumierung metamorpher Gesteine quantifizieren. Ein rheologisches Verhalten, das eine effiziente mechanische Kopplung innerhalb des Krustenprofils gewährleistet, ist demzufolge nicht nur Voraussetzung für lokalisierte Krustenverdickung, sondern auch für rasche Exhumierung von Unterkrustengesteinen durch ein Zusammenspiel von Erosion und isostatischer Hebung. Die Modelle zeigen weiter, dass maximale Exhumierungsbeträge bei rheologisch vergleichsweise festem Verhalten der Unterkruste erzielt werden. Im Einzelnen kann die Variabilität der Versenkungs- und Exhumierungsgeschichte von Materialpunkten im Modellschnitt aus synthetischen PT-Pfaden ersehen werden. Der Wirkungskomplex um Krustentemperaturen, orogene Deformationslokalisierung und synkonvergente Exhumierung ist für die Kollisionsphase der variscischen Orogenese in Mitteleuropa von besonderer Bedeutung. Hochtemperaturmetamorphose und weitverbreitete granitoide Intrusionstätigkeit sind hier Ausdruck hoher Krustentemperaturen; dennoch sind an den Grenzen der klassischen tektonometamorphen Einheiten - im Bereich von Schwarzwald und Vogesen sowie der Mitteldeutschen Kristallinschwelle (MDKS) - eng lokalisierte Teilorogene mit bivergentem Strukturmuster sowie eine rasche synkonvergente Exhumierung amphibolitfazieller Gesteine dokumentiert. Ein solches Nebeneinander ist aus Sicht der Parameterstudien nur durch eine vergleichsweise hochviskose Unterkrustenrheologie zu erklären. In einer Fallstudie zur MDKS kommen in neueren experimentellen Arbeiten bestimmte Kriechparameter (Mackwell et al. 1998) zur Anwendung, mit denen ein derartiges Materialverhalten simuliert werden kann. Der in den reflexionsseismischen Profilen DEKORP 2N und 2S dokumentierte großmaßstäbliche Strukturbau im Bereich des rhenohercynischen Falten- und Überschiebungsgürtels, der MDKS und des saxothuringischen Beckens, sowie die an heute exhumierten Gesteine bestimmten metamorphen Maximalbedingungen können auf dieser Grundlage numerisch reproduziert werden. Eine Erweiterung der Modellierungstechnik auf dreidimensionale FE-Modelle dient der Berücksichtigung orogenparalleler Deformation, die im Randbereich von Kollisionszonen in effektivem Materialtransport resultieren kann; diese Prozesse sind u.a. als „tectonic escape“ (Burke & Sengör 1986) oder „lateral extrusion“ (Ratschbacher et al. 1991b) beschrieben worden. Unter der Annahme orthogonaler Konvergenz wird im 3D-Modell der Mantelsubduktionsansatz der 2D-Modelle zunächst in orogenparalleler Richtung extrudiert (Randbereich des Kollisionsorogens). Im angrenzenden, hinteren Teil des Modells (laterales Vorland des Kollisionsorogens) ist die Modellbasis dagegen keiner Verschiebung oder Fixierung unterworfen. Die Modellränder unterliegen hier einer sogenannten „no-tilt“-Bedingung, die eine differentielle Horizontalverschiebung initial übereinanderliegender Knoten verbietet. In einer Reihe von Parameterstudien werden das kinematische Muster, die räumliche Verteilung der Deformation und die zeitlichen Variationen des oberflächlichen Spannungsfelds untersucht, die sich bei modifizierten Randbedingungen ergeben. Laterale Extrusion ist demnach im Randbereich von Kollisionsorogenen trotz unterschiedlichster Modellszenarien stets präsent. Da die Lateralbewegungen zeitgleich mit der Kollision einsetzen und im Laufe der weiteren konvergenten Krustenverkürzung nur wenig beschleunigt werden, ist der von horizontalen Kräften ausgelöste „tectonic escape“ der dominierende Prozess, während gravitativ induzierte Bewegungen nur eine sekundäre Rolle spielen. Rigide Modellränder in Teilen des lateralen Vorlands modifizieren sowohl Umfang als auch Verteilung der Horizontalbewegungen, ihre Auswirkungen auf das Orogen selbst sind dagegen vergleichsweise gering. Variationen der Krustentemperaturen, der Konvergenzrate und der Unterkrustenrheologie beeinflussen dagegen sowohl die orogene Deformation als auch die des lateralen Vorlands. Unter der Annahme einer festen, isotropen Kopplung zwischen der Krustenbasis und dem bewegten lithosphärischen Mantel werden Extrusionsraten simuliert, die 30% der Konvergenzrate nicht überschreiten. Bis zu 70% können dagegen erreicht werden, wenn eine orogenparallele Beweglichkeit der Modellbasis gestattet wird. Die überragende Bedeutung dieser basalen Randbedingung erlaubt eine Interpretation des miozänen lateralen Extrusionsereignisses in den Ostalpen (z.B. Ratschbacher et al. 1991a). Wenn im Bereich der heutigen Ostalpen zu Beginn der lateralen Extrusion noch kein orogene Topographie bestand (Frisch et al. 1998), fand laterale Extrusion zeitgleich mit bedeutender Krustenverdickung statt; dies spricht für eine Dominanz des von horizontalen Kräften induzierten Prozesses „tectonic escape“ über gravitatives Kollabieren. In jedem Fall legt das in etwa ausgeglichene Verhältnis zwischen Plattenkonvergenz und lateraler Extrusion die Existenz eines basalen Entkopplungshorizonts nahe. Andere Faktoren, die zur Erklärung des Extrusionsereignisses herangezogen werden, z.B. die Indentation der Südalpen oder ein extensives Regime im Bereich des Pannonischen Beckens, können das Deformationsmuster beeinflusst haben, die beobachteten Verschiebungsbeträge sind damit jedoch aus Sicht der Modellstudien nicht plausibel zu machen. Aufgrund ihres großen Maßstabs lassen sich die Verhältnisse bei der Kollision Indiens mit der Eurasischen Platte bislang nur phänomenologisch mit den Modellergebnissen vergleichen. Eine skalierte Fallstudie bleibt somit eine Herausforderung für zukünftige FE-Modelle.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden Dämme und Deiche als geologische Körper betrachtet, die in einen natürlichen geologischen Rahmen eingebettet sind, einer Diagenese unterliegen und mit geowissenschaftlichen Methoden zu erkunden sind. Dem gemäß werden alle geologischen Prozesse und umweltbedingte Einflussfaktoren erörtert, die für die Alterung von Dämmen und die Entwicklung von Schwachstellen von Bedeutung sind. Entscheidende Einflussgrößen sind geogene, aber auch biogene, anthropogene und klimatische Faktoren. Aus der Erkenntnis diesbezüglicher Zusammenhänge wird ein konzeptioneller Ansatz zu einer rein zerstörungsfreien Erkundung von Erddämmen bezogen, die neben visuellen Erkundungen und hydrogeologischen Methoden vor allem geophysikalische Verfahren, insbesondere die Widerstandsgeoelektrik nutzt. Der große Nutzen solcher Widerstandsmessungen ist vielfach belegt worden, wobei die Anwendungen aber selten den akademischen Rahmen verlassen haben. Ungeeignete apparative Ausstattungen und fehlende Messkonzepte für die speziellen Anforderungen einer wirtschaftlich sinnvollen Dammerkundung sind als Hauptgründe für die geringe Praxisnähe anzusehen. Um die zwischen theoretischer Eignung und tatsächlicher Anwendbarkeit klaffende Lücke zu schließen, wurde sowohl für die großräumige als auch zur detaillierten Erkundung von Dämmen optimiertes Zubehör entwickelt, mit dessen Hilfe zerstörungsfreie Untersuchungen mit hoher Wirtschaftlichkeit möglich sind. Von dieser Entwicklung betroffen sind mechanisch belastbare Multielektrodenkabel, verschiedene Erderkonstruktionen, Zubehör für die Aufnahme geoelektrischer Profile und für die Widerstandskartierung, sowie insbesondere auch geoelektrische Messsysteme für Untersuchungen zu Wasser. Neue Messkonzepte und Ausrüstungsbestandteile für die Eigenpotentialmethode und die Adaption der Mise-à-la-masse-Methode an die Dammerkundung vervollständigen den instrumentell/ methodischen Komplex. Als Fallbeispiele für die Umsetzung dieser neuen Konzeption dienen geophysikalische Komplex-Messungen in Verbindung mit der Aufnahme visueller Befunde. Die Untersuchungen wurden, exemplarisch für Stauhaltungsdämme, am östlichen Rheinseitendamm sowie, exemplarisch für Deiche, an einem Kanaldeich im nordöstlichen Ruhrgebiet durchgeführt.
Die bruchhafte Fragmentation von höherviskosem Magma ist ein bedeutender Prozess im explosiven Vulkanismus. Deren Fragmentationsenergie ist linear an die Entstehung neugebildeter Bruchfläche gekoppelt. Aus diesem Grund ist es wichtig, die mechanische Energie der Schmelzefragmentation zu quantifizieren, um die physikalischen Vorgänge während dieses vulkanologischen Vorgangs besser verstehen zu können. Deshalb war es das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit eine Kenngröße der Fragmentationsleistung von vulkanischen Schmelzen der Phlegräischen Felder (Neapel/Italien) zu definieren und somit ihren vulkanischen Ablagerungen spezifische Fragmentationsenergien zuzuweisen. Das Vulkangebiet der Phlegräischen Felder ist durch langanhaltenden explosiven Vulkanismus gekennzeichnet. Die bruchhaft entstandenen Feinaschen-Ablagerungen intermediärer Zusammensetzung bedecken ein Gebiet von ca. 1000 km2. Dieses Gebiet wird heute von ca. 2 Millionen Menschen bevölkert. Diese Arbeit stellt eine Methodik vor, mit der die Fragmentationsenergie von solchen höher-viskosen Schmelzen intermediärer Zusammensetzung durch Laborexperimente und Granulometrie der erzeugten Partikel ermittelt werden kann. Die Materialparameter der kritischen Schubspannung und des kritischen Scherstress wurden mit einem sogenannten Gasdruck-Fragmentations-Versuch (GFV) experimentell bestimmt. Ferner konnten durch den GFV Erkenntnisse über das Fragmentationsverhalten dieser Schmelzen unter verschiedenen treibenden Gasdrücken gewonnen werden. Dieser spezielle Versuchsaufbau basiert auf Fragmentation von Schmelze durch Druckluft, die von unten in einen Tiegel geleitet wird. Ein individuell einstellbarer Gasdruckluftstoß führt in der Schmelze zu einer Zunahme der Schubspannung und einem Druckaufbau, der vergleichbar mit der Kraftrampe eines Biegeversuchs ist. Während dieser Zeit kommt es zur Mikrobruchbildung, die sich von der Schmelzeoberfläche nach unten fortsetzt. Nach dem Überschreiten der Bruchgrenze relaxiert das Schmelzematerial durch Ausbildung von Sprödbrüchen und wird nach oben ausgeworfen. Die Aufzeichnung der physikalischen Parameter und die optische Versuchsüberwachung erlaubten eine komplette Energiebilanzierung des Vorgangs. Die neugebildete Bruchfläche der entstandenen Partikel wird durch Granulometrie und Anwendung der Methode von Brunnauer-Emmet-Teller (BET) bestimmt. Somit kann die Fragmentationsenergie auf die Bruchfläche bezogen und als Materialparameter des kritischen Scherstresses ausgedrückt werden. Der GFV wurden durch normierte Laborexperimente an dem selben Schmelzematerial ergänzt. Dabei dienten statische Biegeversuche unter Raumtemperatur zur Überprüfung der über GFV bilanzierten Scherstresse. Die Rotationsviskosimetrie zeigte, dass der Materialparameter der Viskosität nicht geeignet ist, um Rückschlüsse über Materialverhalten im bruchhaften Regime zu ziehen. Anschließend wurde einer definierten Tephraschicht der Phlegräischen Felder eine spezifische Fragmentationsenergie zugeordnet, indem die experimentellen Ergebnisse auf Felddaten bezogen wurden. Diese spezifische Energie von ca. 8*1010 kJ entspricht der Sprengkraft von ca. 20.000 Tonnen Trinitrotoluol (TNT). Die Qualität eines hazard assessment gefährdeter Vulkangebiete wie z.B. der Phlegräischen Felder wird durch die Kenntnis der Energieaufteilung während des Eruptionsprozesses (Fragmentationsenergie, Auswurfenergie etc.) wesentlich verbessert. Die Kenntnis der Energien dient beispielsweise der Skalierung ballistischer Modelle, mit deren Hilfe dichtbevölkerte Zonen ausgewiesen werden können, die bei künftigen Eruptionen der Phlegräischen Felder durch den Niedergang von Pyroklastika bedroht sind.
In 2001 the 433 m deep Messel 2001 borehole was drilled in the centre of the Messel Pit, 25 km south of Frankfurt (Germany). Geoscientific results from this drilling clarified the origin of the circular-shaped basin as a maar-diatreme-structure. Recovered deposits consist of lacustrine sediments (0-240 m) and volcaniclastic rocks such as lapilli tuffs (240-373 m) as well as rocks of the underlying diatreme breccia (373 433 m). The lapilli tuffs, as main interest here, show little differentiation on a macro- and microscopic scale and appear as a massive and unsorted volcaniclastic body with dominating juvenile lapilli and accidental clasts mostly in the range of (sub)millimetres to centimetres in diameter. This study presents rock magnetic properties measured on core samples of the volcaniclastic units and explains the origin of downhole magnetic anomalies detected during the drilling project in 2001. Magnetic behaviour of the erupted material is related to fine-grained, Fe-rich (titano)-magnetites, which are dispersed within the juvenile lapilli. Temperature-dependent susceptibility experiments, isothermal remanent magnetisation and hysteresis investigations demonstrate similar ferrimagnetic properties throughout the volcaniclastic material, in terms of composition, coercivity and grain size (pseudo-single-domain particles) of the ferrimagnetic minerals. Thus, during emplacement of the erupted material, the ferrimagnetic minerals had the same remanence acquisition potential. However, demagnetisation experiments show different magnetic stability behaviour of the acquired natural remanent magnetisation (NRM). Heating experiments prove the acquisition of thermal remanent magnetisation (TRM) dominated by temperature effects which could have been occurred during eruption and deposition of volcanic material, forming the Messel maar-diatreme. It is assumed that the upper half of the lapilli tuffs was deposited at relatively low depositional temperatures (<300 °C), whereas the material of the lower half took advantage of higher temperatures (>>300 °C). To understand the rock magnetic character within the Messel maar-diatreme-facies, particle grain sizes, the degree of the relative fraction dominance and the shape of the juvenile fragments have been studied in more detail. Image analytical methods as well as major and trace element analyses on the juvenile fraction support the clear subdivision of the lapilli tuffs. These findings in combination with rockmagnetic data indicate a separation into a relatively hot, geochemically undifferentiated eruption phase and a colder, differentiated phase. A two-condition eruption stage at the end of the Messel volcanic activity is suggested. The juvenile particles account for the temperature evolution and heat conditions during deposition of the Messel tuffs and contribute to the origin of magnetic field anomalies. Based on gravity parameters and the results of magnetisation properties, the potential field 3D-model of the Messel subsurface explains the negative ground anomalies, calculates the mass and volume parameters of the drilled lithozones and shows the asymmetric appearance of the diatreme-structure.
The Cambrian is anomalous among geological systems as many reports divide it into three divisions of indeterminate rank. This use of “lower”, “middle”, and “upper” has been a convenient way to subdivide the Cambrian despite agreement it consists of four global series. Traditional divisions of the system into regional series (Lower, Middle, Upper) reflected local biotic developments not interprovincially correlatable with any precision. However, use of “lower”, “middle”, and “upper” is unsatisfactory. These adjectives lack standard definition, evoke the regional series, and are misused. Notably, there is an almost 50 year use of three Cambrian subsystems and a 1997 proposal to divide the Avalonian and global Cambrian into four series and three subsystems. The global series allow proposal of three formal subsystems: a ca. 32.6 Ma Lower Cambrian Subsystem (Terreneuvian and Series 2/proposed Lenaldanian Series), a ca. 9.8 Ma Middle, and a ca. 10 Ma Upper Cambrian Subsystem (=Furongian Series). Designations as “Lower Cambrian Subsystem” or “global Lower Cambrian” distinguish the new units from such earlier units as “Lower Cambrian Series” and substitute for the de facto subsystem terms “lower”, “middle”, and “upper”. Cambrian subsystems are comparable to the Carboniferous’ Lower (Mississippian) and Upper (Pennsylvanian) Subsystems.
A quantitative model of groundwater flows contributing to the Goblenz state water scheme at the north-western fringe of the Kalahari was developed within this study. The investigated area corresponds to the Upper Omatako basin and encompasses an outer mountainous rim and sediments of the Kalahari sand desert in the centre. This study revealed the eminent importance of the mountainous rim for the water balance of the Kalahari, both in terms of surface and ground water. A hydrochemical subdivision of groundwater types in the mountain rim around the Kalahari was derived from cluster analysis of hydrochemical groundwater data. The western and south-western secondary aquifers within rocks of the Damara Sequence, the Otavi Mountain karst aquifers of the Tsumeb and Abenab subgroups as well as the Waterberg Etjo sandstone aquifer represent the major hydrochemical groups. Ca/Mg and Sr/Ca ratios allowed to trace the groundwater flow from the Otavi Mountains towards the Kalahari near Goblenz. The Otavi Mountains and the Waterberg were identified as the main recharge areas showing almost no or only little isotopic enrichment by evaporation. Soil water balance modelling confirmed that direct groundwater recharge in hard-rock environments tends to be much higher than in areas covered with thick Kalahari sediments. According to the water balance model average recharge rates in hard-rock exposures with only thin sand cover are between 0.1 and 2.5 % of mean annual rainfall. Within the Kalahari itself very limited recharge was predicted (< 1 % of mean annual rainfall). In the Upper Omatako basin the highest recharge probability was found in February in the late rainfall season. The water balance model also indicated that surface runoff is produced sporadically, triggering indirect recharge events. Several sinkholes were discovered in the Otavi Foreland to the north of Goblenz forming short-cuts to the groundwater table and preferential recharge zones. Their relevance for the generation of indirect recharge could be demonstrated by stable isotope variations resulting from observed flood events. Within the Kalahari basin several troughs were identified in the pre-Kalahari surface by GIS-based analyses. A map of saturated thickness of Kalahari sediments revealed that these major troughs are partly saturated with groundwater. The main trough, extending from south-west to north-east, is probably connected to the Goblenz state water scheme and represents a major zone of groundwater confluence, receiving groundwater inflows from several recharge areas in the Upper Omatako basin. As a result of the dominance of mountain front recharge the groundwater of the Kalahari carries an isotopic composition of recharge at higher altitudes. The respective percentages of inflow into the Kalahari from different source areas were determined by a mixing-cell approach. According to the mixing model Goblenz receives most of its inflow (70 to 80 %) from a shallow Kalahari aquifer in the Otavi Foreland which is connected to the Otavi Mountains. Another 15 to 10 % of groundwater inflow to the Kalahari at Goblenz derive from the Etjo sandstone aquifer to the south and from inflow of a mixed component. In conclusion, groundwater abstraction at Goblenz will be affected by measures that heavily influence groundwater inflow from the Otavi Mountains, the Waterberg, and the fractured aquifer north of the Waterberg.
Die Müllverbrennung hat sich in der BRD als wichtiges Glied in der Entsorgungskette etabliert. Bei der thermischen Verwertung fällt als Restprodukt u. a. Müllverbrennungsschlacke (MV-Schlacke) an, die deponiert oder wiederverwertet wird. Eine vollständige Abtrennung umweltrelevanter Schadstoffe (vorwiegend Schwermetalle) kann mit dem Verfahren der Müllverbrennung jedoch nicht erreicht werden. Eine nachhaltig umweltbewußte Entsorgung der Schlacke setzt daher voraus, daß sich das Schlacke-Material nach Ablagerung weitestgehend neutral in seiner natürlichen Umgebung verhält. Zahlreiche Untersuchungen verschiedener Autoren haben gezeigt, daß das Auslaugungsverhalten der Schlacke und damit auch das Freisetzen von Schadstoffen bei Ablagerung, sehr stark von den Umgebungsbedingungen abhängt. Wesentlich dabei sind vor allem der Wasserumsatz und die hydrogeochemischen Milieubedingungen im gesamten Ablagerungssystem. Geringe Wasserumsätze und spezielle pH-Bedingungen des Carbonatpufferbereichs bedingen besonders günstige und stabile Verhältnisse. Daraus ist abzuleiten, daß hauptsächlich dort gegenüber MV-Schlacken langfristig ablagerungsfreundliche Bedingungen herrschen, wo einerseits geringe Wasserumsätze und andererseits hohes Puffervermögen durch carbonatische Phasen und prinzipiell geringes Wasserleitvermögen vorausgesetzt werden können. Unter diesen Gesichtspunkten wurden relevante naturräumliche Standortfaktoren definiert, die im Rahmen einer modellhaften Standortanalyse für den Raum Unterfanken (Nordbayern) eingesetzt wurden. Die Haltung, Analyse und Bewertung der vielfältigen, raumbezogenen Daten zu den einzelnen Faktoren erfolgte dabei in einem Geoinformationssystem (GIS) mit Datenbankanbindung. In einer abschließenden Synthese wurden alle Faktoren zusammengeführt und hinsichtlich der Ablagerungsfreundlichkeit unterschiedlicher Naturräume Unterfrankens gegenüber MV-Schlacke bewertet. Im Modell Standortanalyse wurden Bewertungsansätze gewählt, die auf Grundlagen der FUZZY-Logik beruhen. Als wesentliches Ergebnis der Arbeit kann festgehalten werden, daß vorwiegend die Talräume als Ablagerungsstandorte langfristig ungeeignet erscheinen sowie die sandsteindominierten (Spessart, Südrhön, Odenwald) oder vorwiegend von Kristallingestein eingenommenen (Vorspessart) Gebiete mit vergleichsweise hohen Gesamtabflußraten, hohen Durchlässigkeiten sowie geringem Puffervermögen in den Deckschichten. Aufgrund der klimatisch günstigen Position und der geeigneten Deckschichtenverhältnisse erscheinen besonders weite Teile der Mainfränkischen Platten als ablagerungsfreundlich.
Rifting and breakup of Westgondwana in the Late Jurassic/ Early Cretaceous initiated the formation of the South Atlantic and its conjugated pair of passive continental margins. The Walvis Basin offshore NW-Namibia is an Early Cretaceous to recent depositional centre with a typically wedge-shaped postrift sedimentary succession covering an area of 105000km2. A 2D model transect across the central Walvis Basin and adjacent onshore areas is used as a case study to investigate quantitatively the denudational history of the evolving passive margin and the related contemporaneous depositional postrift evolution offshore. The database for both the onshore and offshore part of the model traverse is well constrained by own field work, published data as well as by seismic and well data supported by samples. The ultimate goal of this project is to present an integrated approach towards a quantitative link between surface processes and internal processes in terms of a mass and process balance.
The Skeleton Coast forms part of the Atlantic coastline of NW Namibia comprising several ephemeral rivers, which flow west-southwest towards the Atlantic Ocean. The area is hyper-arid with less than 50 mm average annual rainfall and a rainfall variability of 72%. Therefore, the major catchment areas of the rivers are about 100-200 km further inland in regions with relatively high annual rainfall of 300-600 mm. The coastal plain in the river downstream areas is characterized by a prominent NNW trending, 165 km long belt of 20-50 m high, locally compound, barchanoid and transverse dunes. This dune belt, termed Skeleton Coast Erg, starts abruptly with a series of barchans and large compound dunes 15 km north of the Koigab River and extends from 2-5 km inland sub-parallel to the South Atlantic margin of NW Namibia over a width of 3-20 km. As the SSE-NNW trending dune belt is oriented perpendicular to river flow, the dunefield dams and interacts with the west-southwestward flowing ephemeral river systems. This study focused on three main topics: 1) investigation and classification of the Koigab Fan, 2) the investigation of the Cenozoic succession in the Uniabmond area and 3) comparative studies of fluvio-aeolian interaction between five ephemeral rivers and the Skeleton Coast Erg. Sedimentological and geomorphological investigations show that the Koigab Fan represents a yet undocumented type of a braided fluvial fan system, which operates in an arid climatic, tropical latitude setting, is dominated by ephemeral mixed gravel/sand braided rivers, lacks significant vegetation on the fan surface, has been relatively little affected by human activity, is a perfect study site for recording various types of fluvio-aeolian interaction and thereby acts additionally as a model for certain Precambrian and Early Palaeozoic fan depositional systems deposited prior to the evolution of land plants. The Cenozoic succession in the Uniabmond area consists of three major unconformity-bounded units, which have been subdivided into the Red Canyon, the Whitecliff, and the Uniabmond Formation. The Tertiary Red Canyon Fm. is characterized by continental reddish sediments documenting an alluvial fan and braided river to floodplain depositional environment. The Whitecliff Fm. displays a wide variety of continental and marine facies. This formation provides the possibility to examine fluvio-aeolian interactions and spectacular, steep onlap relationships towards older sediments preserved in ancient seacliffs. The Whitecliff Fm. has been subdivided into four sedimentary cycles, which resulted from sea level changes during the Plio- to Middle Pleistocene. The following Uniabmond Fm. provides a unique insight into the depositional history of the NW Namibian coast during the Last Pleistocene glacial cycle. The formation has been subdivided into four units, which are separated by unconformities controlled by sea level changes. Unit 1 represents deposits of an Eemian palaeo-beach. The overlying Units 2-4 build up the sedimentary body of the Uniab Fan, again a braided river dominated fan, which is nowadays degraded and characterized by deeply incised valleys, deflation surfaces and aeolian landforms. The Uniabmond Fm. is overlain by the dunes of the Skeleton Coast Erg, whose development is related to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The damming of river flow by aeolian landforms has been previously recognized as one of several principal types of fluvio-aeolian interaction. Five ephemeral rivers (from S to N: Koigab, Uniab, Hunkab, Hoanib, Hoarusib), which variously interact with the Skeleton Coast Erg, were chosen for the purpose of this study to consider the variability of parameters within these fluvio-aeolian systems and the resulting differences in the effectiveness of aeolian damming. The fluvio-aeolian interactions between the rivers and the dune field are controlled by the climate characteristics and the geology of the river catchment areas, the sediment load of the rivers, their depositional architecture, the longitudinal river profiles as well as the anatomy of the Skeleton Coast Erg. Resulting processes are 1) aeolian winnowing of fluvially derived sediments and sediment transfer into and deposition in the erg; 2) dune erosion during break-through resulting in hyperconcentrated flow and intra-erg mass flow deposits; 3) the development of extensive flood-reservoir basins caused by dune damming of the rivers during flood; 4) interdune flooding causing stacked mud-pond sequences; and 5) the termination of the erg by more frequent river floods.
Interaktion und Vermischung kompositionell unterschiedlicher Silikatschmelzen treten im gesamten Spektrum magmatischer Aktivität auf. Dabei kann es sowohl zu Magma mingling-, als auch zu Magma mixing-Prozessen kommen. Magmatische Enklaven und Dispersionen sind dabei Zeugen der ehemaligen Interaktion und Vermischung der beteiligten Schmelzen. Diese Arbeit präsentiert ein neuartiges Modell zur Genese magmatischer Dispersionen, das auf hydrodynamischen Mischungsprozessen der beteiligten Schmelzen beruht. Es geht davon aus, dass es bei geeigneten, an der Grenzfläche zwischen zwei Schmelzen wirkenden Scherkräften zu mechanischen Mischungsprozessen unter Ausbildung von Dispersionen kommen kann. Die dafür relevanten Parameter umfassen die jeweiligen Viskositäten der Schmelzen, die zwischen ihnen herrschende Grenzflächenspannung, die anliegenden Scherraten bzw. Fließgeschwindigkeiten und die zur Verfügung stehende Zeitspanne. Die praktische Anwendbarkeit und die generelle Gültigkeit für georelevante Silikatschmelzen des Modells zur hydrodynamischen Genese magmatischer Dispersionen wurde experimentell durch Laborversuche und durch die Anwendung auf natürliche Fälle magmatischer Mischungsprozesse bestätigt. Somit steht auch ein tool im Sinne der Geospeedometrie zur Verfügung, mit dem die damaligen Temperaturen, Viskositäten und relativen Strömungsgeschwindigkeiten der beteiligten Magmen zum Zeitpunkt ihrer Vermischung berechnet und rekonstruiert werden können. Es liefert wichtige Daten zur Erfassung der kinematischen Eigenschaften von Silikatschmelzen und trägt so zur weiteren Aufklärung der komplexen magmatischen Systeme bei.
This study has focused on hydrogeological and hydrochemical settings of the Northern Namibian Kalahari Catchment which is the Namibian part of the Makgadikgadi-Kalahari-Catchment. Recharge has been the subject of process-understanding, quantification and regionalisation. Within the semiarid study area a bimodal surface constitution is prominent: hardrocks areas allow for fast infiltration along karsts and joints, whereas areas covered by unconsolidated sediments receive minor diffuse recharge and locally some preferred flow path recharge develops along shrinkage cracks and rootlets. Five substratum classes have been soil physically studied: Pans and vleis, brown to red soils, dune sand, soil with an aeolian influence, and calcrete. Aeolian sands are most promising for the development of direct diffuse recharge. Recharge by preferred flow might occur in all soil classes either due to joints in calcrete or structures and rootlets in soils. All soil classes contribute to indirect recharge because even the dune sand allows, albeit very locally, the generation of runoff. The occurrences of recharge through the unconsolidated soil and the hardrocks have been confirmed by hydrograph interpretation and by a study of hydrochemical data which identified groundwater of flood water and flood water after soil passage composition. Other prominent hydrochemical processes in the Kalahari are associated with the carbonate-equilibrium-system, mixing with highly mineralised water that is either sulphate (central area) or chloride dominated (fringe area) and development of sodium hydrogencarbonate water types. The latter is mostly generated by feldspar weathering. Variations of the hydrochemical compositions were observed for shallow groundwaters. They do not only reflect the recharge amount but also the recharge conditions, e.g. a wetter year is allowing more vegetation which increases the hydrogencarbonate content. Inverse determination of recharge by the chloride mass balance method gives recharge amounts between 0.2 and locally more than 100 mm/a. The least favoured recharge conditions are found for Kalahari covered areas, the largest amount occurs in the Otavi area. The distribution of recharge areas within the catchment is rather complex and regionalisation of recharge for the entire catchment was done by a forward approach using satellite images and by an inverse approach using hydrochemical data. From the inverse hydrochemical approach a basin-wide balanced recharge amount of 1.39 mm/a is achieved. The forward approach gave a basin-wide figure of 0.88 (minimum assumption) to 4.53 mm/a (maximum assumption). A simplistic groundwater flow model confirmed the results from the minimum recharge regionalisation by satellite images and the result from the hydrochemical approach. Altogether a mutually verified basin-wide recharge figure of ca. 1 mm/a turns out.
The geologic barrier represents the final contact between a landfill and the environment. Ideally suited are clays and mudstones because of sufficient vertical and lateral extent, low hydraulic conductivities and high sorptive characteristics. Since hydraulic conductivity is no longer the single criteria to determine transport and retardation of contaminants in geologic landfill barrier materials, diffusive and sorptive characteristics of 4 different clay and mudstone lithologies in Northern Bavaria, were investigated. Cored samples from various depths were included in this study and subjected to evaluations of geochemistry, mineralogy, physical parameters, sorption and diffusion. A transient double reservoir with decreasing source concentration was designed and constructed using clear polycarbonate cylinders for undisturbed clay plugs of 2 to 4cm thickness. Samples were also fitted with internal electrical conductivity probes to determine the migration of the diffusive front. A multi chemical species synthetic landfill leachate was contrived to simulate and evaluate natural pollutant conditions. A computational method for determining mineralogy from geochemical data was also developed. It was found that sorptive processes are mostly controlled by the quality and type of fine grained phyllosilicates and the individual chemical species involved exhibited linear, Freundlich, as well as Langmuir sorption properties. Effective diffusion and sorption coefficients were also determined using POLLUTEv6 (GAEA, 1997) software and receptor reservoir concentrations for K, Na, Ca, Cu, NH4, Cl, NO3, SO4, and concentration totals at predetermined time intervals. Anion exclusion proved to be a major factor in the diffusion process and was used to explain many observed anomalies. Furthermore, diffusion coefficients were found not to be static with a multi chemical species leachate, but actually varied during the course of the experiment. Strong indications point toward the major role of pore space quality, shape, and form as control of diffusive properties of a geologic barrier. A correlation of CECNa of the samples with De may point to a possible deduction of diffusive properties for multi species leachates without extensive and time consuming laboratory tests
This work presents the analysis, 3D modeling and interpretation of gravity and aeromagnetic data of Jordan and Middle East. The potential field data delineate the location of the major faults, basins, swells, anticlines, synclines and domes in Jordan. The surface geology of Jordan and the immediate area east of the Rift is dominated by two large basins, the Al-Jafr basin in the south and the Al-Azraq-Wadi as Sirhan basin to the northeast. These two basins strike southeast-northwest and are separated by an anticlinal axis, the Kilwah-Bayir swell. The Karak Wadi El Fayha fault system occurs along the western flank of the swell. The Swaqa fault occurs on the southwest hinge of Al-Azraq basin and the Fuluq fault occurs on its northeast hinge. In the south west of Jordan, Wadi Utm-Quwaira and Disi-Mudawara fault zones are shown clearly in the aeromagnetic and gravity maps. The previous major faults are well correlated with the structural map of Jordan published by Bender (1968). 3D modeling of gravity data in the Dead Sea basin (DSB) was used together with existing geological and geophysical information to give a complete structural picture of the basin. The 3D models of the DSB show that the internal structure of the Dead Sea basin (DSB) is controlled by longitudinal faults and the basin is developed as a full graben bounded by sub-vertical faults along its long sides. In the northern planes of the 3D model, the accumulation of Quaternary (salt and marl) and Mesozoic (pre-rift) sediments are thinner than in the central and southern planes of the model. In the northern planes, the thickness of the Quaternary sediments is about 4 km, 5 km in the southern planes and it exceeds 8 km in the central planes of the DSR. The thickness of the pre-rift sediments reaches 10-12 km in the northern and southern planes and exceeds 15 km in the central planes of the DSR. The planes of the 3D models show that the depth to the crystalline basement under the eastern shoulders of the DSR is shallower than those beneath the western shoulders. It is about 3-5 km beneath the eastern shoulders and 7-9 km under the western shoulder of the DSR. The gravity anomaly maps of residual and first derivative gravity delineate the subsurface basins of widely varying size, shape, and depth along the Rift Valley. The basins are created by the combination of the lateral motion along a right-tending step over and normal faulting along the opposite sides. Al Bakura basin occupies the upper Jordanian River valley and extends into the southern Tiberias Lake. Bet Shean basin to the south of Al Bakura basin plunges asymmetrically toward the east. The Damia basin, comprising the central Jordan Valley and Jericho areas to the north of the Dead Sea is shallow basin (~600-800m deep). The Lisan basin is the deepest basin in the Rift. The 3D gravity models indicate a maximum of ~12 km of basin fill. Three basins are found in Wadi Araba area, Gharandal, Timna (Qa'-Taba) and Aqaba (Elat) basin. The three basins become successively wider and deeper to the south. The three regional gravity long E-W profiles (225 km) from the Mediterranean Sea crossing the Rift Valley to the east to the Saudi Arabia borders, show the positive correlation between topography and free air anomaly and strong negative Bouguer anomaly under the central part of the Dead Sea Basin (DSB) and normal regional Bouguer anomaly outside of the DSB in the transform valley. Depth to the top of the bedrock in the under ground of Jordan was calculated from potential field data. The basement crops out in the south west of Jordan and becomes deeper to northwards and eastwards to be about ~ 8 km below ground surface in the Risha area.
Mit Hilfe eines eindimensionalen Strömungsmodells für die ungesättigte Zone wird die Grundwasserneubildung in einem Poren-Kluftgrundwasserleiter berechnet. Als Untersuchungsgebiet wurde das Einzugsgebiet der Hafenlohr im Buntsandsteinspessart gewählt. Grundlage der Berechnungen sind Kenntnisse über die Wassergehalts-Saugspannungsbeziehungen und über die hydraulischen Durchlässigkeiten von Kluft- und Porenraum. Der Modellraum wird als Zwei-Porositäts-Medium interpretiert wobei Poren- und Kluftraum über Austauschterme miteinander verknüpft sind. Mit dem gewählten Modell ist es möglich neben der Grundwasserneubildung auch Oberflächenabfluss, Evapotranspiration und an Schichtgrenzen auftretende Zwischenabflüsse zu berechnen. Der Übergang vom Bodenhorizont zum Festgestein hat den größten steuernden Einfluss auf die Grundwasserneubildung. Die Neubildungshöhe beträgt durchschnittlich etwa 66 bzw. 100 mm, je nachdem, ob die Zwischenabflüsse im Festgestein berücksichtigt werden. Die Schwankung der Grundwasserneubildung ist auch in Jahren mit extremen Niederschlagshöhen gering. Eine Simulation des Abflussverhaltens der Hafenlohr mit den berechneten Daten stimmt gut mit gemessenen Werten überein.
At Zwartbas, about 10 km west of Vioolsdrif, southern Namibia, the Dwyka succession is composed of tillites and distal fossiliferous dropstone-bearing glacio-marine shales. The completely exposed Dwyka succession is interbedded with thin bentonites, altered distal pyroclastic deposits, which were derived from the magmatic arc at the southern rim of Gondwana. Dropstone-bearing and dropstonefree sequences intercalate with four diamictites, of which the two lowest were certainly recognised as tillites. Four events of deglaciation were proven at Zwartbas and thus consist with correlative deposits in southern Africa. Numerous fossilised fishes, trace fossils, and plant fragments appear frequently within the lower half of the Dwyka succession whereas trace fossils were principally found in the complete succession. Although the environmental determination is quite problematic, the fossil assemblage rather implies proximal, shallow water conditions with temporary restricted oxygenation. The hinterland was covered with considerable vegetation, which points to a moderate climate. Water salinity determinations based on shale geochemistry rectify contrary palaeontological results and point to rather brackish or non-marine conditions in comparison to present-day salinites. Geochemical analyses of the bentonites relate the pyroclastic deposits with acid to intermediate source magmas, as they are known from the magmatic arc in present-day Patagonia. Tectono-magmatic comparisons furthermore emphasise a syn-collision or volcanic-arc situation of the magma source. However, significant cyclicity in the production of the pyroclastic deposits was not observed. Radiometric age determinations of two tuff beds clearly date the onset of glacial activity into the Late Carboniferous.
The locality of Zwartbas is situated at the border of Namibia and South Africa about 15 km west of Noordoewer. The mapped area is confined by the Tandjieskoppe Mountains in the north and the Orange River in the south. Outcropping rocks are predominantly sediments of the Nama Group and of the Karoo Supergroup. During the compilation of this paper doubts arose about the correct classification of the Nama rocks as it is found in literature. Since no certain clues were found to revise the classification of the Nama rocks, the original classification remains still valid. Thus the Kuibis and Schwarzrand Subgroup constitute the Nama succession and date it to Vendian age. A glacial unconformity represents a hiatus for about 260 Ma. This is covered by sediments of the Karoo Supergroup. Late Carboniferous and early Permian glacial deposits of diamictitic shale of the Dwyka and shales of the Ecca Group overlie the unconformity. The shales of the Dwyka Group contain fossiliferous units and volcanic ash-layers. A sill of the Jurassic Tandjiesberg Dolerite Complex (also Karoo Supergroup) intruded rocks at the Dwyka-Ecca-boundary. Finally fluvial and aeolian deposits and calcretes of the Cretaceous to Tertiary Kalahari Group and recent depositionary events cover the older rocks occasionally.
For many active volcanoes all over the world a civil protection program, normally combined with hazard maps, exists. Optimising of hazard maps and the associated hazard assessment implies a detailed knowledge of the volcanostratigraphy, because the deposits provoke information on the potential behaviour during a new activity cycle. Pyroclastic deposits, however, may vary widely in thickness and distribution over very short lateral distances. High resolution characterisation of single strata often cannot be archived, if solely sedimentological and geochemical methods are used. Gamma-ray measurements taken in the field combined with grain-size depended magnetic susceptibility measurements made in the laboratory are used in this work to optimise the resolution of volcanostratigraphic investigations. The island of Vulcano is part of the Aeolian Archipelago sited of the northern coast of Sicily. La Fossa cone is the active centre of Vulcano, where fumarolic and seismic activity can be observed. The cone was built up during the last 6,000 years, whereby the last eruption period is dated to historic times (1888-1890). For the tuff cone La Fossa the most likely volcanic hazards are the emplacement of pyroclastic deposits as well as gas hazards (especially SOx and CO2), due to this the detailed knowledge of the stratigraphy is mandatory. Most of the population resides in Vulcano Porto and the nearby sited peninsula of Vulcanello, which are highly endangered locations for a future eruption scenario. Measurements, made in standard outcrops, allow a characterisation of the successions Punte Nere, Tufi Varicolori, Palizzi, Commenda, and Cratere Attuale. A discrimination of all successions by solely one of the methods is rarely possible. In some cases, however, the combination of the methods leads to clear results. It can also be noticed that the exposition as well as the sedimentation type (wet-surge or dry-surge deposits) affect the measurements. In general it can be assumed that the higher the magma is evolved the higher the g -ray values and the lower the susceptibility values. Measurements from the Wingertsberg (Laacher See deposits, Eifel, W-Germany) show clearly that a higher degree of magma evolution correlates with lower susceptibility and higher gamma-ray values. Variations of the values can be observed not only by the change of the degree of magmatic evolution but also by the inhomogeneous deposition conditions. Particularly the gamma-ray measurements show lower values for the wet-surge deposits than for the dry-surge deposits, even though the erupted material has the same geochemical composition. This can be explained especially by reactions inside of the moist eruption cloud and short-time after deposition, when easily soluble elements like K, U, and Th can be leached by these aggressive fluids. Even extended exposition and high water content can provoke depletion of various elements within the complete or parts of the outcrop, too. If the deposits are affected by a fumarolic activity especially the susceptibility values show significant variations, whereas in general extreme low values are observed. Contamination of deposits also can occur, if they are overlain by weathered deposits of higher concentration of K, U, and Th. Weathering and mobilisation within the upper deposits can generate an element enrichment within the lower deposits. In general the element ratios of the barried underlying deposits are less affected than the exposed ones. After gauging the values of the well defined succession for standard outcrops undefined outcrops were measured. These outcrops are not clearly classified by sedimentological and geochemical methods, thus a correlation with the combined geophysical methods is useful. In general the combination of the methods allows a correlation, although in some cases more than one interpretation is possible. But in connection with time marker horizons as well as sedimentological features an interpretation is feasible. These situations show that a classification solely based on geophysical methods is possible for many cases but, if the volcanic system is more complex, a combination with sedimentological and geochemical methods may be needed. The investigations on Vulcano, documented in this work, recommend a re-interpretation of the dispersial of some successions of La Fossa cone, especially the presumption that Tufi Varicolori only exist inside of the Caldera of La Fossa. As a consequence the eruption and energy model especially for Tufi Varicolori have to be reviewed.