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Journal of the Geological Society; 2007; v. 164; issue.2; p. 341-351;
DOI: 10.1144/0016-76492005-189
© 2007 Geological Society of London

Original Article

The Orange River, southern Africa: an extreme example of a wave-dominated sediment dispersal system in the South Atlantic Ocean

B.J. Bluck1, J.D. Ward2, J. Cartwright3 & Roger Swart4

1 1Department of Geography and Earthsciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK (e-mail: Brian.Bluck@ges.gla.ac.uk)
2 2Gem Diamonds Ltd, Johannesburg, South Africa
3 3Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Cardiff, Cardiff CF10 3YE, UK
4 4NAMCOR, Windhoek, Namibia

Sediments delivered to the South Atlantic Ocean by the Orange River are fractionated and dispersed northwards and westwards by a vigorous longshore drift system and a number of ocean currents. Gravels are accreted to the coastline for a distance >300 km north from the Orange River mouth. Sands are transported alongshore for >700 km but are, in places along this transport path, returned onshore by coastal winds to form the main Namib Sand Sea and other smaller dune fields. Mud is more widely dispersed westwards, northwards and southwards, probably by slow-moving, ocean-scale currents into basins on the shelf and onto the continental shelf edge. This dispersal system, operating since at least Eocene times, is believed to have originated during a time when there was a Late Cretaceous–Early Cenozoic uplift of southern Africa, which resulted in: (1) intensification of the existing southerly wind system; (2) incision of the Orange River, which, coupled with a shift in climate, resulted in a coarsening of its sediment load delivered to the coast; (3) a broad, weakly subsiding or mildly uplifting inner continental shelf with little accommodation space for the sediment load of the incising Orange River.