LATE QUATERNARY PALEOHYDROLOGY IN THE TROPICS AND SUB-TROPICS
Quaternary sediments indicate prolonged deposition during Zone 3 continuing until 27ka. Forest changes and reduced rainfall became severe at the LGM. Fans, braided rivers and ephemeral tributaries that left few deposits, are recorded from Amazonia, Congo, E and W Africa, India and N Australia: 27/23-15/14ka. Recovery of climate was diachronous after 17ka. In Africa, lake overflows and floods occurred at 13.5ka and 11ka. Sedimentation increased x2 in the Ganges delta at 11ka. In W Africa channels were scoured, and gravels deposited after 15ka, in NE Australia fans entrenched after 14ka. From 11-8ka humid climates and rainforest were widely established and meandering channels replaced braided rivers as flow regimes stabilised. TheYD and mid-Holocene aridity affected lakes and rivers, but no change to fluvial style is evident.
Major issues include: 1/ the regionalisation of climate change and fluvial response across the tropics; 2/ the differential and diachronous response between equatorial and arid areas (severity of LGM, progress of wetter post-glacial, Holocene climates, collapse of rainfall in the mid-Holocene); 3/ the nature and timing of the fluvial response to hydrologic change on different timescales. Although lake levels and palaeofloods often indicate immediate responses to water inputs, the evolution of floodplains is more complex, requiring millennia of changing climate and land cover. But the major impact of Quaternary climates on stream and slope hydrology in the tropics is confirmed, and is fundamental to the evaluation of short-term changes in fluvial and hillslope systems.