Holocene depositional history inferred from single-grain luminescence
ages in southern California, North America.
Abstract
Significant sediment flux and deposition in a sedimentary system are
influenced by climate changes, tectonics, lithology, and the sedimentary
system’s internal dynamics. Identifying the timing of depositional
periods from stratigraphic records is a first step to critically
evaluating the controls of sediment flux and deposition. Here, we show
that ages of single-grain K-feldspar luminescence subpopulations may
provide information on the timing of previous major depositional
periods. We analyzed 754 K-feldspar single-grains from 17 samples from
the surface to ~9 m-depth in a trench located downstream
of the Mission Creek catchment. Single-grain luminescence subpopulation
ages significantly overlap at least eight times since
~12.0 ka indicating a common depositional history. These
depositional periods correspond reasonably well with the wetter climate
periods based on hydroclimatic proxies from nearby locations. Our
findings imply a first-order climatic control on sediment depositional
history in southern California on a millennial timescale.