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Journal of the Geological Society; October 1985; v. 142; no. 5; p. 777-787; DOI: 10.1144/gsjgs.142.5.0777
© 1985 Geological Society of London
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Late Quaternary alluvial placer development in the humid tropics: the case of the Birim Diamond Placer, Ghana

A. M. Hall, M. F. Thomas* and M. B. Thorp{dagger}

Fettes College, Edinburgh EH4 1QX, Scotland, UK
* Department of Environmental Science, University of Stirling; Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland UK
{dagger} Department of Geography, University College, Dublin, Dublin 4, Republic of Ireland

Examination of the diamondiferous sediments of the Birim River floodplain in Ghana using radiocarbon dating allows the recognition of three chronostratigraphic units: 13000–11000, 9000–7000, and 2100 years BP to the present, while older sediments rest on bedrock benches and form terraces. The late Pleistocene sediments infill deeper, scour channels, are generally both thicker and coarser, and return higher diamond grades. One thousand nine hundred samples from 700 boreholes indicate that diamond grade is influenced by bedrock consistency, gravel thickness, gravel calibre, and stratigraphic position, but other external factors include supply of coarse quartz from bedrock, valley morphology, and the location of tributary junctions and diamond sources. The influence of palaeoenvironmental conditions on fluvial deposition and placer formation in W Africa appears widespread and relates to the known late Quaternary climatic changes established from Lake Bosumtwi, Ghana, and from the Sahara.




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M. F. Thomas and M. B. Thorp
The response of geomorphic systems to climatic and hydrological change during the Late Glacial and early Holocene in the humid and sub-humid tropics
Geological Society, London, Special Publications, January 1, 1996; 115(1): 139 - 153.
[Abstract] [PDF]


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Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
I. a. n. Reid and L. E. Frostick
Role of settling, entrainment and dispersive equivalence and of interstice trapping in placer formation
Journal of the Geological Society, October 1, 1985; 142(5): 739 - 746.
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