TY - JOUR AU - Cramer, Michael D. AU - von Holdt, Johanna AU - Khomo, Lesego AU - Midgley, Jeremy J. PY - 2016/02/01 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Evidence for aeolian origins of heuweltjies from buried gravel layers JF - South African Journal of Science JA - S. Afr. J. Sci. VL - 112 IS - 1/2 SE - Research Article DO - 10.17159/sajs.2016/20150025 UR - https://sajs.co.za/article/view/4147 SP - 10 AB - <p>Although&nbsp;<em>heuweltjies&nbsp;</em>(19–32 m diameter) dominate the surface of much of the southwestern Cape of South Africa, their origins, distribution and age remain controversial. Current hypotheses are that the&nbsp;<em>heuweltjies&nbsp;</em>are (1) constructed by the excavation and mounding habits of burrowing animals; (2) the result of erosion by water of areas between patches protected from fluvial action by denser vegetation or (3) the product of localised aeolian sediment accumulation beneath denser vegetation associated with termitaria. At a site where quartz-containing gravels occur on the soil surface in areas between&nbsp;<em>heuweltjies</em>, these gravels were found to extend as a relatively intact layer of uniform concentration from the inter-mound area into the mound at the same plane as the surrounding soil surface. This buried layer suggests that&nbsp;<em>heuweltjies&nbsp;</em>were either built-up by deposition on a previous soil surface layer or eroded from sediment accumulated above the buried gravel layer. Mounds contain a relatively large proportion of silt consistent with sediment deposition. Mound sediment elemental composition was strongly correlated with that of local shale, indicating a local source of sediment. Pedogenesis was considerably more advanced off- than on-mound. There was no evidence of extensive regional aeolian sediment mantling over the vast area in which the&nbsp;<em>heuweltjies&nbsp;</em>occur. These findings and observations support the aeolian deposition hypothesis of&nbsp;<em>heuweltjie&nbsp;</em>origins combined with a degree of erosion, rather than a termite bioturbation hypothesis or a predominantly erosion-based hypothesis.</p> ER -