Research Letters
Number One Reef: An overstepped segmented lagoon complex on the KwaZulu-Natal continental shelf
Andrew Green, Rio Leuci, Zane Thackeray, Godfrey Vella
About the author(s)
Andrew Green, Discipline of Geological Sciences, School of Agricultural, Earth and
Environmental Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville campus, Durban, South Africa
Rio Leuci, Environmental Mapping and
Surveying, Durban, South Africa
Zane Thackeray, Environmental Mapping and
Surveying, Durban, South Africa
Godfrey Vella, Coastal Engineering Department, Ethekweni Municipality, Durban, South Africa
Abstract
This study of the bathymetry of the mid-shelf of the Durban Bight, KwaZulu-Natal revealed a series of previously undocumented seafloor features. These features were mapped using a high-resolution multibeam bathymetric echosounder and a detailed map of the seafloor topography was produced. We recognised several features that closely resemble features of contemporary segmented lagoon and lake systems: semicircular seafloor depressions, arcuate ridges, cuspate spits and prograding submerged barriers. Based on the striking similarity in morphology to Kosi Bay – a segmented lagoon system from the sandy northern KwaZulu-Natal coastal plain – a similar evolutionary model is proposed. This model is of an incised valley formed following a sea level lowering to the Last Glacial Maximum at about 18 000 BP. Thereafter, continued transgressive infilling occurred to a point where an extensive lagoon and back-barrier system was established. At this point, sea levels remained static, causing the net segmentation of the system and the slow closure of the tidal basins or circular depressions. This type of seafloor topography is rarely preserved and is the result of fortuitous cementation after deposition and the later removal of sediment that would ordinarily bury such features.
Keywords
Continental Shelf; Bathymetry; Incised Valleys; Segmentation
Metrics
Total abstract views: 2672
Total article views: 3254
Reader Comments
Before posting a comment, read our privacy policy.
Post a comment (login required)
Crossref Citations
1. Spatial and temporal variations in incised valley systems from the Durban continental shelf, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Andrew N. Green, Nonkululeko Dladla, G. Luke Garlick
Marine Geology vol: 335 first page: 148 year: 2013
doi: 10.1016/j.margeo.2012.11.002
2. Outer- to inner-shelf response to stepped sea-level rise: Insights from incised valleys and submerged shorelines
L. Pretorius, A.N. Green, J.A.G. Cooper, A. Hahn, M. Zabel
Marine Geology vol: 416 first page: 105979 year: 2019
doi: 10.1016/j.margeo.2019.105979