Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's preface
- List of contributors
- I Introduction
- II Studies of palynosedimentation in modern environments
- 2 The sorting of spores and pollen by water: experimental and field evidence
- 3 Transport and deposition of pollen in an estuary: signature of the landscape
- 4 Pollen preservation in alkaline soils of the American Southwest
- 5 Wind and water transport and sedimentation of miospores along two rivers subject to major floods and entering the Mediterranean Sea at Calvi (Corsica, France)
- 6 Sedimentation of land-derived palynomorphs in the Trinity–Galveston Bay area, Texas
- 7 The genesis and sedimentation of phytoclasts with examples from coastal environments
- 8 Palynofacies of some recent marine sediments: the role of transportation
- 9 Maceral palynofacies of the Louisiana deltaic plain in terms of organic constituents and hydrocarbon potential
- 10 Organic sedimentation in a carbonate region
- 11 An approach to a standard terminology for palynodebris
- 12 Relationships of palynofacies to coal-depositional environments in the upper Paleocene of the Gulf Coast Basin, Texas, and the Powder River Basin, Montana and Wyoming
- III Reconstruction of late Cenozoic vegetation and sedimentary environments from palynological data
- IV Application of data on palynosedimentation to solution of geological problems
- V Appendix
- Index
5 - Wind and water transport and sedimentation of miospores along two rivers subject to major floods and entering the Mediterranean Sea at Calvi (Corsica, France)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's preface
- List of contributors
- I Introduction
- II Studies of palynosedimentation in modern environments
- 2 The sorting of spores and pollen by water: experimental and field evidence
- 3 Transport and deposition of pollen in an estuary: signature of the landscape
- 4 Pollen preservation in alkaline soils of the American Southwest
- 5 Wind and water transport and sedimentation of miospores along two rivers subject to major floods and entering the Mediterranean Sea at Calvi (Corsica, France)
- 6 Sedimentation of land-derived palynomorphs in the Trinity–Galveston Bay area, Texas
- 7 The genesis and sedimentation of phytoclasts with examples from coastal environments
- 8 Palynofacies of some recent marine sediments: the role of transportation
- 9 Maceral palynofacies of the Louisiana deltaic plain in terms of organic constituents and hydrocarbon potential
- 10 Organic sedimentation in a carbonate region
- 11 An approach to a standard terminology for palynodebris
- 12 Relationships of palynofacies to coal-depositional environments in the upper Paleocene of the Gulf Coast Basin, Texas, and the Powder River Basin, Montana and Wyoming
- III Reconstruction of late Cenozoic vegetation and sedimentary environments from palynological data
- IV Application of data on palynosedimentation to solution of geological problems
- V Appendix
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In the Mediterranean region, several studies have been devoted to the distribution of pollen in coastal marine areas (Rossignol, 1961; Koreneva, 1971; Rossignol & Pastouret, 1971; Belfiore et al., 1981; Brun, 1983). Other studies have tried to understand the pollen rain in mountain areas where peat bogs are excellent pollen recorders (Reille, 1975; Beaulieu, 1977). However, little is known about how much of the pollen produced in high and middle altitudes is transported to the area of sedimentation near the shoreline, and how it is transported.
The region of Calvi in Corsica is typical of Mediterranean climatic conditions, where mountains rise to 2000 m a short distance (20 km) from the coast, with rather humid climate at the top (near 2000 mm precipitation, concentrated during the cold season; Simi, 1964), and rather dry climate (near 700 mm precipitation) near the coast. Autumn, winter, or spring high rainfall on the top and on steep slopes (Fig. 5.1) produces huge and violent floods (Guilcher, 1979), which carry large stones that accumulate on the narrow coastal plain and which also deliver fine material to the sea. During the dry season (summer) the rivers are at minimum flow and often vanish in the coarse sediments of the coastal plain. Two small rivers enter the sea near Calvi, the Fiume Secco and the Ficarella (Fig. 5.1).
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- Sedimentation of Organic Particles , pp. 59 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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