Buried soil cracks in alluvium near Braidwood, NSW
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Soil Research
- Vol. 19 (3), 255-263
- https://doi.org/10.1071/sr9810255
Abstract
Buried soil cracks developed within sandy alluvium are described from the Upper Shoalhaven Valley south-west of Braidwood. The cracks, 10-40 mm wide and filled with an indurated sandy matrix, are about 1 m apart, up to 1.75 m deep, and arranged in a polygonal pattern. Determinations are made of the field and laboratory characteristics of the materials in which the cracks are developed and of the in-fill matrix, and these characteristics are related to possible mechanisms of formation. One possible group of mechanisms is seasonal frost-induced cracking associated with periodic filling in of the cracks by wind- or water-borne debris, then partial truncation of the materials followed by burial under alluvium. The cracks are unlikely to be more than c. 21 000 years old, and may be younger.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Geomorphological significance of late quaternary deposits of the Lake George Area, N.S.W.Australian Geographer, 1977
- Late Quaternary Climates of Australia and New GuineaQuaternary Research, 1976
- Soil profile development in some alluvial deposits of eastern New South WalesSoil Research, 1976
- Late Quaternary Climates in AustraliaThe Journal of Geology, 1965