2023
DOI: 10.1002/dep2.221
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Exceptional preservation in Quaternary Atacama Desert Tufas: Evidence for increased groundwater and surface water in the Calama Basin, Atacama, Chile

Abstract: Exceptionally well‐preserved tufas located west of Calama, Atacama Desert, Chile, designated Santa Juana tufas, record episodic wetter conditions, relative to today, over the past 500,000 years. Globally, tufa architecture and depositional details are poorly understood as most described tufas have been degraded by weathering and erosion. In the hyperarid Atacama, post‐depositional alteration is negligible, therefore, the exceptional preservation of Santa Juana tufas documented in this study provides new inform… Show more

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“…Tufas also provide opportunities to reconstruct Quaternary climates and hydrology but often undergo extensive alteration due to weathering. De Wet et al (2023) use the exceptionally preserved tufas of the arid Calama area of the Atacama Desert in Chile to identify a range of depositional settings, regional changes in groundwater composition and changed climate towards the late Pleistocene, as well as wetter time periods during the Quaternary within the drainage basin headwater area. The δ 18 O and δ 13 C values are used, respectively, to identify evaporation effects and the influence of volcanogenic carbon on biological signals in the carbonates.…”
Section: Papers In This Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tufas also provide opportunities to reconstruct Quaternary climates and hydrology but often undergo extensive alteration due to weathering. De Wet et al (2023) use the exceptionally preserved tufas of the arid Calama area of the Atacama Desert in Chile to identify a range of depositional settings, regional changes in groundwater composition and changed climate towards the late Pleistocene, as well as wetter time periods during the Quaternary within the drainage basin headwater area. The δ 18 O and δ 13 C values are used, respectively, to identify evaporation effects and the influence of volcanogenic carbon on biological signals in the carbonates.…”
Section: Papers In This Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%