The Homeb
silts in the Namib Desert
Principal Investigator: Dr. Mary. C. Bourke
Co-Investigators: Alex Shaw,

Al
Child,
Stephen
Stokes, St. Catherines Coillege,
Funding was provided in part by the Research Opportunity Fund, Smithsonian Institution (2000-2001).
Project
summary
Fine grained terraces that represent past episodes of valley aggradation
are found in many of the world’s arid regions, e.g. the

Figure 1. Aerial photo of
This research focuses on one of the better studied of these terrace
sequences, the Homeb Silts in the Kuiseb
Canyon, Namibia (Fig. 1). The

Figure 2: Homeb
Silts in Tributary of
We have dated the sequence using Optically Stimulated Luminescence and determined that the silts were aggraded in the early to mid Holocene [Bourke et al., 2003]. This revises the Last Glacial Maximum age estimates previously derived using Radiocarbon and Thermoluminescence techniques. These revised age estimates are more in line with regional paleoclimatic data. However, the chronology indicates that the silts aggraded at an extraordinary rate of 7.43 m ka-1, an order of magnitude above rates calculated in other similar depositional environments [e.g., Williams et al., 2001].
We use a suite of
techniques (Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Optically Stimulated
Luminescence (OSL), geosurveying and facies mapping)
to determine the source of sediments, chronology and style of deposition. The
data suggest that sediments generated by the aggressive salt weathering regime
of the

Figure 3: Research on a shoe string. Field vehicle for August 2000 trip!
References
Bourke, M.C., A. Child, and S. Stokes, Optical age estimates for hyper-arid fluvial deposits at Homeb, Namibia, Quaternary Science Reviews, 22, 1099-1103, 2003.
Bourke, M.C., and A.I. Shaw, The origin and source of the Homeb Silts, Namibia, in prep.
Heine, K., and J.T. Heine, A paleohydrologic reinterpretation of the Homeb Silts, Kuiseb River, central Namib Desert (Namibia) and paleoclimatic implications, Catena, 48, 107-130, 2002.
Ollier, C.D., Outline geological and geomorphological history of the central Namib Desert, Madoqua, 10 (3), 207-212, 1977.
Ward, J.P., The Cenozoic Succession in the Kuiseb Valley, Central Namib Desert, pp. 124, Geological Survey of South West Africa, Namibia, 1987.
Williams, M., J.R. Prescott, J. Chappell, D. Adamson, B. Cock, K. Walker, and P. Gell, The enigma of a late Pleistocene wetland in the Flinders Ranges, South Australia, Quaternary International, 83-85, 129-144, 2001.
Publications:
Bourke, M.C., A. Child, and S. Stokes, (2003) Optical age estimates for hyper-arid fluvial deposits at Homeb, Namibia, Quaternary Science Reviews, 22 (10-13), 1099-1103.
Conference Papers:
Bourke, M.C., A. Child, and S. Stokes, (2002) A
re-evaluation of the age of the Homeb Silts,
Bourke, M.C., and A. Shaw, (2003) Slackwater
deposits in the Kuiseb Canyon, Namibia, in
Paleoflood III,
Thesis:
Child, A., (2001) A Holocene flood history of the Central Namib Desert
established using optical dating, Unpublished undergraduate
thesis,