Paleoenvironment and hydrological characteristics of the eastern Congo
basin, Central Africa
Abstract
A great deal of paleoenvironmental research on tropical alluvia and
slope sediments assumed the long-term persistence of stable climates and
associated rainforest vegetation in the Congo basin during the
Quaternary. Geomorphological, paleo-hydrological and ecosystem history
research in the eastern Congo basin (Kivu, DR Congo) has provided
evidence of the frequent occurrence of multi-layered alluvia and fans in
river valleys and plains as well as stratified slope deposits
(hill-wash, stone-lines, pedo-sediments) that reflect former
modifications of the environment. Numerous radiocarbon data indicate
that ecosystems within the Congo basin are highly sensitive to climate
change through modification of surfaces and run-off dynamics. A
stratigraphic record characterized by variable sediment layers of
2.0–5.5 meters thick spans the Holocene and the Pleistocene back to 50
ka BP (completed by finds from Cameroon and Central African Republic).
Buried stone-lines and paleo-soils indicate once drier, more open
landscapes under alternating wet and dry climates in currently humid and
semi-humid regions. A conceptual morpho-dynamic model is presented and
summarizes process related response to former environmental
modifications.