1Instituto de Geociências e Ciências Exatas – IGCE, Universidade Estadual Paulista “Júlio de Mesquita Filho” – UNESP, Rio Claro (SP), Brazil. E-mail: assine@rc.unesp.br, ermerino82@yahoo.com.br, hud_azevedo@hotmail.com e mauricioguerreiro@yahoo.com 2Instituto de Geociências, Universidade de São Paulo – USP, São Paulo (SP), Brazil. E-mail: fabianopupim@gmail.com *Corresponding author. Manuscript ID: 20150014. Received: 07/02/2015. Approved: 08/21/2015. ABSTRACT: The Pantanal Basin is an active sedimentary basin in central-west Brazil that consists of a complex alluvial systems tract characterized by the interaction between different river systems de- veloped in one of the largest wetlands in the world. The Paraguay River is the trunk river system that drains the water and part of the sediment load received from areas outside of the basin. Depositio- nal styles vary considerably along the river profiles throughout the basin, with the development of entrenched meandering belts, anastomosing reaches, and floodplain ponds. Paleodrainage pat- terns are preserved on the surface of abandoned lobes of fluvial fans, which also exhibit many degradational channels. Here, we propose a novel classification scheme according to which the geo- morphology, hydrological regime and sedimentary dynamics of these fluvial systems are determined by the geology and geo- morphology of the source areas. In this way, the following sys- tems are recognized and described: (I) the Paraguay trunk-river plains; (II) fluvial fans sourced by the tablelands catchment area; (III) fluvial fans sourced by lowlands; and (IV) fluvial interfans. We highlight the importance of considering the influences of source areas when interpreting contrasting styles of fluvial architectures in the rock record. KEYWORDS: Pantanal; wetlands; fluvial megafan; modern depositional environments; alluvial systems tract. The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil Trato de sistemas aluviais do Quaternário da Bacia do Pantanal Mario Luis Assine1*, Eder Renato Merino1, Fabiano do Nascimento Pupim2, Hudson de Azevedo Macedo1, Mauricio Guerreiro Martinho dos Santos1 DOI: 10.1590/2317-4889201520150014 INVITED REVIEW RESUMO: A Bacia do Pantanal é uma bacia sedimentar situada no Cen- tro-Oeste do Brasil, caracterizada pela presença de um moderno trato deposi- cional aluvial e pela interação de vários tipos de sistemas desenvolvidos em uma das maiores e mais importantes áreas úmidas do planeta. O Rio Paraguai rep- resenta o rio-tronco do sistema e drena a água e parte da carga sedimentar recebida de outras áreas extrabacinais. Os rios nos diferentes sistemas apre- sentam mudanças de estilo fluvial em consequência de fatores alogênicos e autogênicos, com desenvolvimento de cinturões de meandros incisos, domínios distributários não confinados e mundanças de canal único para padrões multi- canal (anabranching). A superfície de lobos abandonados apresenta complexa rede de paleocanais e canais degradacionais tributários superimpostos. Com base na geomorfologia, na hidrossedimentologia e nos processos de sedimentação, é proposta classificação dos sistemas aluviais do trato deposicional do Pantanal em quatro grupos principais: (I) planícies do rio tronco; (II) leques fluviais com bacias de captação em planaltos sedimentares; (III) leques fluviais formados por rios provenientes de terrenos pré-cambrianos arrasados; e (IV) planícies interle- ques. Os sistemas deposicionais que compõem o trato deposicional do Pantanal, cujos estilos são condicionados por fatores autogênicos (construção e abandono de lobos) e alogênicos (mudanças climáticas e condicionantes tectônicos), são importantes análogos modernos para a interpretação de unidades geológicas de origem aluvial de diferentes períodos do tempo geológico. PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Pantanal; terras úmidas; megaleque fluvial; ambientes modernos de sedimentação; trato de sistemas aluviais. 475 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 INTRODUCTION The Pantanal is an active sedimentary basin characte- rized by basin-margin faults and multiple subsurface faul- ted blocks, encompassing a series of depressions in which a more than 500 m-thick sedimentary succession has accu- mulated (Assine 2003, Assine & Soares 2004; Fig. 1). Active tectonics is confirmed by recent earthquakes, tectonically- controlled streams, and differential subsidence within the basin (Assumpção et al. 2004; Assumpção & Sacek 2013). The modern depositional system forms the largest tropical wetland in the world (Por 1995), comprising an approxi- mately 150,000 km2 seasonally-flooded area developed most prominently in central-west Brazil (Assine 2015). The various morphologies of the modern depositional systems were pre- viously classified according to landscape features, flooding dynamics and hydroperiods, flowing rivers, vegetation type, and local names (e.g. Hamilton et al. 1996, Silva & Abdon 1998, Padovani 2010). The sedimentary successions of the Pantanal Basin record the deposition on a large alluvial plain characterized by the interplay between fluvial fans and megafans, as well as flu- vial interfans and a trunk fluvial plain. These distinct alluvial systems are part of a huge depositional tract, which reflects the geomorphological heterogeneity of the basin. The term system tract is used to describe contemporaneous genetically three-dimensional depositional systems (Brown & Fisher 1977). Here, we propose a novel classification of the allu- vial systems of the Pantanal Basin, and organize them into groups of fluvial-system tracts characterized by contrasting catchment areas, namely the Palaeozoic Paraná Basin tab- lelands, the lowlands of nearby Precambrian metamorphic terrains, and the alluvial plain itself. Particular fluvial styles, sediment load, discharge, and hydrologic regime typifies each system. Many of these rivers change in style downstream, passing from fluvial fans to interfans or, in the case of the Paraguay River, to a trunk river system; aggradation and degradation dominate different parts of individual systems. We characterize the particular hydro-sedimen- tological functioning of each system and the associated mass transfer to the basin. This study aims at providing a robust classification scheme to understand fluvial sys- tems developed in an actively subsiding tropical basin. The Pantanal Basin is an ideal and exceptional analo- gue for the development of facies models regarding the interpretation of alluvial successions in the rock record. Implications include the development of a complex and broadly-applicable depositional model for continental Figure 1. Geological setting of the Pantanal Basin (topographical profile based on South America SRTM-DEM; sediment thickness contours in meters). 2000 1400 1000 200 600 600 700 800 1000900100 200 300 500400 Bolivian Chaco Pantanal Basin Cenozoic Mesozic Precambrian Paleozic 150 km 476 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil A Lineament River Borehole Drills (Total depth = meters) reached the precambrian basement did not reach the precambrian basement B Figure 2. Distinct flooding patterns during dry and wet seasons in the Pantanal wetland (the yellow line is the wetland border). (A) Wet season 2011, MODIS/Terra MOD13Q1 R(MIR)G(EVI)B(Blue) composite band; (B) Dry season of 2008, MODIS/Terra MOD13Q1 R(MIR)G(EVI)B(Blue) composite band. Dark colors in the images indicate flooded areas, which are in many sites tectonically controlled. Geological lineaments indicate the general trends of brittle structures within the basin. sedimentation in order to predict the overall architec- ture and facies assemblages of fluvial deposits in the rock record from basin- to outcrop-scale. The depositional tract of the Pantanal was mapped using several types of orbital data (e.g. Landsat series, GeoCover Circa 1990 and 2000, SPOT, ASTER and MODIS/Terra MOD13Q1; 90 m SRTM digital elevation model – DEM; aerial-photography; geological and geomorphological maps of the Geological Survey of Brazil). High- to medium-re- solution spatial, radiometric and multitemporal satellite images were utilized to assess morphological zones and features within the basin. In order to understand the sea- sonal flood dynamics of the Pantanal and its distinct mor- phological features under such contrasting water regimes, we used images from both dry and wet season of different years. Hydro-sedimentologic information was obtained from datasets of the Brazilian Water Agency (ANA) (http:// hidroweb.ana.gov.br). The depositional systems of the Pantanal basin were dis- tinguished based on the following criteria: ■ delimitation of the Pantanal plain based on the propo- sal of Padovani (2010); ■ zonation of distinct depositional systems based on mor- phological similarity recognized on orbital data; ■ mapping of both recent and ancient minor-scale land- forms of depositional and erosive nature; and ■ identification of paleochannels and other evidence of changes in the river pattern and location through time. PHYSICAL SETTINGS The concentric isopach curves depicted on the Fig. 1 are speculative as they are based on very few subsurface data and overlook the presence of faults. The Pantanal Basin is delimited by active, major brittle faults to the east and west, the dips of which characterized by hundreds of meters of displacement. Differential movement along fault planes can be inferred from the shallow earthquakes commonly regis- tered in the area, and are understood as accommodation- -space controls, which likely resulted in the observed large seasonably floodable areas (Fig. 2). Straight limits of flooded areas are indicative of active faulting, however trace faults within the wetland were not mapped yet, and the geological lineaments presented on Fig. 2 indicate the general trends of brittle structures. The basin axis is oriented in a roughly north-south direction. A series of distinct basement rocks surround the basin. Precambrian metamorphic lowlands 477 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 Mario Luis Assine et al. surround the basin on its north, south and west sides, whe- reas the tablelands of the Palaeozoic Paraná Basin crop out to the east (Fig. 1). The eastern margin of the basin is characterized by con- vex-eastward planform geometry, but the western margin is characterized by a more irregular limit, with many pro- tuberances and segments that are apparently erosional, for- ming a complex arrangement of fractures of both NNW and WNW strikes. It is likely that many of these fractures were inherited from the underlying basement rocks. The nor- thern limits of the basin are characterized by multifaceted array of NE- and NW- trending fractures, clearly inherited from the basement rocks. The southern limit is marked by the NW-striking Bodoquena plateau, a horst that separa- tes the Pantanal Basin to the northeast and the Chaco Basin to the southwest. Bedrock rivers draining Paleozoic sedimentary plateaus and dissected Precambrian basement feed the basin. These rivers become unconfined upon entering the basin, where they experience lower gradients and diminished water flow of the wide alluvial plain (Assine & Silva 2009). The mor- phological characteristics and the high sediment supply determine the avulsive nature of the active channels and paleochannels, typically resulting in the development of various multichannel systems and distributary planforms further downstream (Assine 2005, Assine et al. 2014). The dominant depositional form is that of a radial, distribu- tive channel pattern (Nichols & Fisher 2007, Hartley et al. 2010), including megafans, fluvial fans, and small debris- flow-dominated alluvial fans associated with the basin boar- der escarpments. This depositional-setting type has been recently suggested as the dominating alluvial style in the alluvial rock record (Weissmann et al. 2010). The Pantanal Basin preserves up to 500 m-thick depo- sits that record Quaternary climatic fluctuations, including the Pleistocene highly seasonal rainfall and dry climate, and the Holocene wet and warm conditions (Ab’Sáber 1988, McGlue et al. 2012). Many paleochannel planform observed through satellite imagery on the surface of inactive parts of the modern systems were originated from river-system deposition with styles that markedly contrast with the modern channel sys- tems (Assine & Soares 2004, Assine et al. 2014, Macedo et al. 2014), providing a clear perspective to understand the climatic and tectonic impacts on fluvial dynamics. The basin formation has long been associated with the Andean tectonics (Almeida 1959), more specifically to a subsidence model due to extensional stress at the forebulge (Shiraiwa 1994, Ussami et al. 1999) or in the back-bulge domain (Horton & DeCelles 1997) of the Andes foreland system, which includes the Chaco Basin as the foredeep area. However, the mechanism of basin formation remains unsolved, and new information must be considered, such as the negative velocity anomalies of seismic wave propagation at different lithosphere depths below the Pantanal region (Feng et al. 2007). Besides, the basin initiation during the Quaternary is uncertain and the lack of geochronological data leaves open the possibility that the basin formed much earlier, perhaps during an interval of widespread tectonism in southern Brazil during the Eocene-Miocene (Assine et al. 2015a). Nonetheless, the relict landscapes and the Quaternary surface deposits document the numerous climatic fluctu- ations of the Cenozoic, providing valuable insights on the overall preserved architecture and facies assemblages that accumulated under such climatic conditions. The Pantanal is one of the largest wetlands in the world (Por 1995, Fraser & Keddy 2005, Junk et al. 2006), and most of its landscapes are pristine and home to a rich biodiversity (Alho 2008, Assine 2015). Its savanna climate (Alho 2005) is characterized by mean temperature range between 20 and 27ºC, a negative water balance determined by a precipitation range between 800 and 1,300 mm, and evaporation range between 1,300 and 1,600 mm. The wetland environment is guaranteed by water inflow from the surrounding plate- aus, and facilitated by slow surface runoff (promoted by low river-plain gradients), and infiltration and retention by the sandy alluvial plain (Assine et al. 2015b). The presence of standing water is critical for both patterns of biodiversity and biogeochemical cycling. DEPOSITIONAL TRACT The Pantanal sedimentary basin comprises a complex depositional tract composed of various fluvial systems, loca- ted within the Upper Paraguay River drainage basin. This large-scale alluvial plain consists of a dynamic system of floodplains and fluvial fans with heterogeneous river channels network connected to the axial Paraguay River. The Paraguay River flows from north to south, and is cha- racterized by intricate morphology of contrasting river plain styles from its entrance into the basin and throughout the alluvial plain until the southernmost area of the Pantanal, through the Bodoquena Plateau, where it enters the Chaco Basin. The Taquari, São Lourenço and Cuiabá rivers, the main tributaries of the Paraguay, form major megafan sys- tems characterized by flow vectors mainly oriented in a trans- verse direction to the basin axis. There are also a number of smaller-scale, but not less important, river systems, such as the Itiquira, Negro, Taboco, Aquidauana, Jaurú, Miranda, Nabileque, and Corixo Grande rivers. Some of these rivers develop particular and varied channel patterns characteri- zed by multichannel distributary planforms with progressive 478 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil decreasing of river-channel widths and discharge; other rivers form large-area permanently floodbasins and complexly-de- veloped lacustrine systems. The Pantanal is an exorheic basin (i.e., externally drai- ned), with the Paraguay River carrying water and sediment to the Chaco Basin. However, most of the sediment loaded by rivers is deposited within the Pantanal wetland. Data from gauge stations of the main rivers (Paraguay, Cuiabá, São Lourenço, Piquiri, Taquari, Aquidauana, and Miranda) at their entrance into the Pantanal reveal that the suspen- ded sediment supply to the basin is ~25 million ton/year. Only 10% of this total is recorded in fluvial stations loca- ted in the Paraguay River south of the Nabileque fluvial fan (Porto Murtinho gauge station), which means that 90% of the sediment-load is retained in the Pantanal basin. The presence of many bars indicates very high bottom traction transport in most of the Pantanal rivers, but there is no information about the amount of bed-load sediment supply to the basin. A classification scheme describing the Pantanal basin, in which distinct systems are related to specific source-area geomorphologies (Fig. 3), is here proposed. We identify four primary categories: ■ the Paraguay trunk-river plains; ■ fluvial fans sourced by the tablelands catchment area; ■ fluvial fans sourced by lowlands; and ■ fluvial interfans. Debris-flow-related alluvial fans occur on the basin-bo- arder pediment slopes associated with the eastern tableland escarpments, characterized by coarse-grained sandstone and matrix-supported conglomerate; and calcretes and ferricretes duricrusts associated with some of these deposits (Boggiani & Coimbra 1995, Nascimento et al. 2015). Smaller-scale alluvial plains are mapped in the basin-border, but will not be discussed in this paper. Other features include complex floodplain-lake systems, which are characterized by various forms and scales, and contrasting chemical properties (McGlue et al. 2011, McGlue et al. 2015). Such lakes are developed in areas of active floodplains, as well as in abandoned parts of megafans. Some were formed by water damming resul- ting from meander-belt aggradation and basin-boarder con- finement, whereas others present orientations which can be related to tectonic controls and other mechanisms not clearly understood yet, including long-term climatic fluctuations (Bezerra & Mozeto 2008; McGlue et al. 2012). Tableland-catchment fluvial fans Tableland-catchment fluvial fans are located in the eastern limits of the basin and are sourced by dissected sedimentary tablelands developed on Paleozoic-Mesozoic deposits of the Paraná sedimentary basin. Deep fluvial erosion in the catchment area is responsible for high sedi- ment yield carried to the Pantanal Basin. The sediment yield of these fluvial systems can reach 22.5 million ton/year, being responsible for ~90% of total suspended load sedi- ment supplied to the Pantanal Basin. The suspended sediment loaded by the Taquari River is nowadays the largest, reaching up to 72% of the total. Crossing sharp escarpments and leaving the catchment area within the plateau, these rivers form large-scale fluvial fans (megafans) by depositing their sediment loads as a result of much reduced topographic gradients within the Pantanal Basin. Famous examples of such fans are the Taquari and São Lourenço megafans (Figs. 3 and 4), large-scale systems characterized by modern distal depositional lobes and fee- der rivers entrenched in upper fan Pleistocene-aged allu- vial deposits. The Aquidauana, Taboco, Itiquira and Negro megafans belongs to this group, but are characterized by smaller areas (Fig. 3). The Taquari River forms the largest megafan of the Pantanal Basin, with an area of ~50,000 km2, accounting for about 37% of the Pantanal Basin area (Assine 2003, Zani et al. 2012). The river is characterized in its alluvial reaches by an entrenched meander belt in the upper fan (Figs. 4A and 5A), but loss of confinement downstream of the inter- section point results in multiple, narrow and shallow dis- tributary channels, progressively decreasing in discharge and forming the modern lower-fan lobe (Assine 2005). This megafan is easily visible in satellite imagery and accu- mulates large volume of sediments, particularly on its floo- dbasin (approximately 16 million ton/year). Avulsion is the main process within this system that typically develops by progradation of splays into floodbasin accommodation, with many events recorded on large-scale geomorphic features, such as avulsion belts and diverted paleochannels (Assine 2005, Buehler et al. 2011). The southern part of the Taquari megafan is marked by more than 10,000 shallow lakes, in a region named Nhecolândia. Those circular to elliptical small lakes are elongated in a NE direction, and their margins are bordered by up to 5 m-height sand ridges. Most of them are seasonally flooded, and present freshwater hydrochemistry and intense colonization by aquatic macrophytes. Some of these lakes (~10%) are isolated from pluvial surface flow and are characterized by white-sand beaches and brackish to saline water, with large proliferation of cyanobacteria. These lakes are alkaline salines and present pH values of up to 10, with the presence of bicarbonate, chlorinated and sodic waters (Barbiéro et al. 2002). The São Lourenço megafan is the third largest megafan of the Pantanal, with an approximate area of 13,000 km2. It records the succession of multiple fluvial-channel styles developed since the Pleistocene. Ancient fan lobes preserve 479 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 Mario Luis Assine et al. Figure 3. Depositional systems tract. Fluvial Fans (tablelands-catchment) 1 - São lourenço 2 - Itiquira 3 - Taquari 4 - Negro 5 - Taboco 6 - Aquidauana Fluvial Fans (Lowlands-catchment) 7 - Jaurú 8 - Paraguay 9 - Cuiaba 10 - Miranda Fluvial Fans (Pantanal-catchment) 11 - Nabileque Fluvial Interfans Plains 12 - Itiquira 13 - Negro 14 - Corixo Grande 15 - Negro (Bolivia Paraguay River Plains 16 - Paraguay-Cáceres 17 - Paraguay-Canzin 18 - Paraguay-Amolar 19 - Paraguay-Corumbá 20 - Paraguay-Nabileque 50 km 22 0 S 580W 20 0 S 18 0 S 16 0 S 20 0 S 18 0 S 16 0 S 580W 560W Fluvial Fans (tablelands-catchment) Fluvial Fans (Lowlands-catchment) Fluvial Fans (Pantanal-catchment) Aluvial Fans (piedmont) Nhecolândia lakes Platcaus and Lowlands Fluvial Gauge Station Interfan Fluvial Plains Paraguay Trunk River Plains Undifferentiated Plains Lacustrine Systems Degradational abandoned lobes Lake River Town 540W numerous paleochannels, which exhibit various planform styles that typically diverge downstream into minor distri- butary channels; the styles evolved from the ancient mul- ti-thread braided channels to modern sinuous channels (Corradini & Assine 2012). Such channel-style evolution occurred as the result of climatic fluctuations, from Late Pleistocene dry conditions leading to braided-channel deposition, to Holocene warmer and wetter climatic set- tings leading to meandering-channel deposition (Assine et al. 2014). This evolution of fluvial-channel styles is reflected in an overall finning-upward trend, ranging from the basal coarse-grained sands (related to the older braided-channel 480 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil A 15 km 450 m 200 m 175 m 150 m Figure 4. Digital elevation model (90m SRTM-DEM) of the Upper Paraguay drainage basin showing the Pantanal wetland, the alluvial rivers and their sediment-source catchment areas. (A) The Taquari meander belt, confined within an incised valley in the upper megafan setting. (B) Distributary channels and paleochannels in the modern depositional lobe of the São Lourenço megafan.(C) Topographic contrast among rivers in megafan and interfan systems. 100 km 1000 m 200 m 130 m 70 m Elevation 15 km 200m 130m 80m B 150 140 130 120 110 100 El ev at io n (m ) 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 Distance (km) N São Lourenço River Taquari River Piqueri River Negro River Aquidauana River São Lourenço Megafan Piquiri Interfan Taquari Megafan Negro Interfan Aquidauana Megafan C deposition) to fine-grained sand, siltstone and clay of the younger deposits. The distal reaches of the São Lourenço megafan are characterized by depositional lobes of distribu- tary channel-levee ridges, which resulted from progradation onto an unconfined floodbasin (Assine et al. 2014; Fig. 4B). Approximately 1.3 million ton/year of suspended sediment is deposited on both distal (present lobe) and middle rea- ches of São Lourenço megafan. The Aquidauana megafan is located in the SE region of the Pantanal Basin and presents a flow direction to the NNW. It flows through an incised meander belt on its proximal reaches, passing downstream into a wide river plain on its distal reaches where channel-levee complexes are located on higher altitudes than its surrounding floodplains, with many recorded crevasse-splays and frequently flooded floodplains (Facincani & Assine 2010). Similarly, the Negro River fan presents an entrenched belt on its abandoned Pleistocene lobe and an unconfined plain with low gradient anabran- ching channels on its distal portion (Cordeiro et al. 2010, Mendes 2014). The Itiquira and Taboco megafans technically belong to this group of systems, but now they are domina- ted by degradational processes associated with sheet-flow 481 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 Mario Luis Assine et al. Figure 5. Meander Belts. (A) Taquari River; (B) Paraguay River; (C) Piquiri River; (D) Negro River. All images acquired from the online Basemap ArcGIS 10.2.2. A B C D during the annual flooding season, and no longer function as effective depositional fluvial fans. Lowland-catchment fluvial fans Lowlands-catchment fluvial fans are sourced by sediments from the surrounding Precambrian igneous and metamorphic rocks. The sediment yield of these systems is much smaller when compared with the tableland-catchment fluvial fans, once they have less than 1.1 million ton/year of suspended load. The Cuiabá fluvial-fan system is the second largest mega- fan of the Pantanal Basin and the major megafan of this category of system tract. It comprises a 15,000 km² area in the northern part of the Pantanal Basin, presenting an elon- gate and broad active depositional lobe characterized by a main channel, which presents numerous crevasse splays and a floodplain area characterized by many abandoned channels and fine sandy lobes. Its Pleistocene lobe is relatively small when compared with abandoned lobes of other systems, but it clearly shows ancient braided bifurcating channels. The active channel belt is characterized by low gradients (~ 0.20 m/km), and is entrenched in the proximal parts of the fan. Drainage patterns considerably vary along the river path through the basin and are characterized by both mean- dering and anabranching channel planforms (Pupim 2014). The Paraguay River flows in a meander belt entrenched in Pleistocene deposits in the northwest border of the Pantanal wetland (Fig. 5B). Downstream, the river forms a fluvial megafan because of a loss of valley confinement and decreasing topogra- phic gradient when it enters the Pantanal Basin. Paleochannels are preserved on the surface of a Pleistocene-aged abandoned fan lobe, forming cross-paleodrainage networks. A main mean- dering channel, which is the Paraguay River proper, domina- tes the active depositional lobe, with bifurcations that forms anabranching channels, as well as hundreds of small lakes. The topographic gradient abruptly diminishes at the base of the modern depositional lobe and the Paraguay fluvial plain style changes downstream from this point (Assine & Silva 2009). The Miranda River fluvial fan exhibits a different morpho- logic fluvial style, displayed by a mostly meandering channel in its fluvial plain reaches, with an alluvial ridge characteristically occupying higher elevations than the surrounding floodplains that progressively widens downstream. Aggradational domains 482 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil of this system are located on the proximal portion of the fan, and this markedly contrasts with most of the other fluvial systems of the basin. Along its lower course, the river flows in a meander belt incised over Pleistocene alluvial deposits, with many preser- ved oxbow lakes. The river is mostly degradational on its distal reaches, incising paleochannel belts with varied channel widths and morphologies. Pluvial sheet flows commonly erode the sur- rounding fluvial plain, which are also drained by small ancient distributary channels during major floods (Merino et al. 2013). Interfan riverplains Interfan systems are fluvial plains placed in between flu- vial fans (Sinha & Friend 1994). This kind of system presents increasing fluvial discharge and sediment load downstream. The Corixo Grande river plain is located in the northwestern border of the Pantanal wetland, and collects water and sedi- ment derived from abandoned lobes of the Paraguay megafan, forming undifferentiated alluvial plains created by epheme- ral streams originated from the Bolivian territory. The Negro River plain (Bolivia/Paraguay) is another interfan system that contours the fringe from the Nabileque megafan and also drains waters from the Otuquis-Tucavaca and Pilcomayo megafans, which are situated to the west (Kuerten & Assine 2011). Sediment-source analyses indicate that the sediments of these systems are derived from reworking of previously deposited sediments on the alluvial tract, implying that these are plains-fed systems. The semi-arid climate westward to the Brazilian Pantanal determines the intermittency of such rivers. The Piquiri and the Negro interfan river plains sepa- rate the Taquari megafan from coalescent megafans at its north and south borders (Fig. 3). Both rivers are peren- nial and flow in meander belts confined within incised valleys (Fig. 5C and 5D). The meandering fluvial style is constant along the entire Piquiri course (Pupim et al. 2014), but the Negro River shows many changes in its fluvial style, crossing a permanently flooded basin downstream, where the river changes to a multichan- nel-planform pattern (Mendes 2014). Although both river interfan systems receive water and sediment mainly from within the alluvial domain, i.e. from the adjacent fluvial fans, they are also supplied from water and sedi- ments coming from piedmont alluvial fans, and directly from the tablelands-catchment areas. These interfan-ri- ver plains can be classified as mixed-fed systems, as the sediment supply originates from different source areas. Paraguay trunk river plains The Paraguay River flows from north to south and is the trunk fluvial system of the Pantanal Basin. It is characterized by complex geomorphic features reflecting the tectonic control on the western margin of the Pantanal basin, and interactions with the distal portion of the other fluvial megafans, deve- loping multiple styles from its entrance in the basin to its exit, where it joins the Chaco Basin further south. The river- -mainstream plain comprises five distinct fluvial-floodplain compartments, each one presenting distinct depositional forms, channel pattern and hydrologic behavior (Fig. 6). The Paraguay-Cáceres river-plain reach is located onto a north-northeast-oriented valley incised on Precambrian crystalline rocks; it exhibits a 4-5 km-wide aggradatio- nal meander belt, constrained by the Jaurú fluvial fan at the right and the NE- oriented ridges of Província Serrana Mountains at the left margin. The river gradient is relatively steep (6.30 cm/km), and the channel has irregular meanders with some small anabranching chan- nels, oxbow lakes and islands along this reach. When the Paraguay River enters into the Pantanal basin, the river gradient decreases (5.9 cm/km), and a channel bifur- cation forms the modern lobe of the Paraguay mega- fan. The 30 km-long Taiamã Island resulted from an important bifurcation (Bracinho River, to the left), and the downstream channel rejoining. Recently, crevasses upstream the Taiamã Island are diverting considerable volume of water flow into the floodplain on the right margin of the river, where the Canzi River develops an anabranching-channel system (Assine and Silva, 2009). The Paraguay-Canzi river plain is characterized by low-gra- dient (2.6 cm/km) floodplain areas with many abandoned meander channels, large-scale seasonal floods, and numerous observed crevasse-splays. Hundreds of lakes form in the floo- dplain, including the largest, Lake Uberaba, as well as the large Gaíva Lake. This fluvio-lacustrine plain is a large area of active sedimentation, receiving water and sediment from the Paraguay and Canzi rivers, the Cuiabá megafan, basin-margin drainages, and peripheral channels of the Corixo Grande interfan system. The Paraguay-Amolar river plain is a confined floodplain bordered by the Serra do Amolar mountains and the Cuiabá and Taquari megafans. This setting creates a narrow (6 km) and long (53 km) floodplain, constricting the river flow (hydraulic bottleneck) and creating a continuous water body upstream this reach. The Mandioré and Vermelha lakes arose at the right margin of the Paraguay River because of dam- ming by meander-belt aggradation (McGlue et al. 2011). The Paraguay-Corumbá river plain placed downstream of the Vermelha Lake is characterized by a 27 km-wide plain drained by an anabranching reach formed by the Paraguay and the Paraguay-Mirim Rivers. This wide floodplain is abruptly closed at the mouth of the Miranda River, establishing an additional bottleneck to the Paraguay River flow (Assine et al. 2015b). This flat floodplain (gradients around 2.0 – 2.3 cm/km) is not homogeneous, but covered by paleochannels of anabran- ching channels of the ancient Paraguay River (Macedo et al. 483 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 Mario Luis Assine et al. 2014). Inactive during the low-medium water level, these paleochannels receive water during the floods. In the southernmost limit of the basin, the Paraguay River enters in the less subsiding area, where it crosses the Nabileque megafan in a narrow meander belt incised into Pleistocene-aged deposits (Kuerten & Assine 2011). Sponge spicules analysis in the Nabileque megafan indicate that this fan is a relict fea- ture that was constructed by the Paraguay River during the Pleistocene (Kuerten & Assine 2011, Kuerten et al. 2013). Most of the Nabileque megafan surface is subject to degradation, but abandoned lobes can be recognized by the existence of an intricate network of distributary paleochannels on its surface. SYSTEMS TRACT SEDIMENTARY DYNAMICS The complex flood regime of the Pantanal Basin and the varied nature of the source rocks from which sediments are provided to the basin determine the heterogeneity of this lar- ge-scale alluvial plain, and the geology of source areas plays a fundamental role in the development of the fluvial fans, particularly in terms of sediment supply, river gradients, and depositional dynamics. As demonstrated above, each group of system tracts is characterized by common geomorpholo- gical features which are partially derived from the processes Figure 6. The Paraguay trunk river system is located on the western border of the Pantanal basin (A) Depositional systems that compose the Paraguay river plains (legend captions in the Fig. 3); (B) Landsat satellite image composition GeoCover Circa 2000. 50 Km A Cáceres Paraguay - Cáceres Uberaba Gaiva Mandioré Vermelha Cácere Corumbá Jacadigo B 484 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil involved in the sediment and water transfer from the plateau to depositional lobes. The largest catchment areas are com- monly translated into larger modern fluvial fan areas, with the Taquari as the most prominent example (Figs. 3 and 4). Sediment is readily available in finer-grained particles for fluvial transport in tableland-catchment fluvial fans because the source rivers drain Paleozoic and Mesozoic recy- cled siliciclastic rocks of the Paraná Basin. These rivers are deeply incised into their bedrocks in the catchment area, as opposed to rivers draining lowland areas, which results in higher fluvial plain gradients. This situation results in ele- vated proportions of sediment load, and partly determines the nature and the governing dynamics of the related fluvial fans, particularly the São Lourenço and Taquari megafans. These fans notably constitute the most active depositional sites of the basin. Entrenched meander belts at their upper portions and overall sediment bypass presently characterize these megafans. Such belts are apparently related to a past regional incision event that proceeded major changes in depositional dynamics, which resulted in a transition from Pleistocene-aged braided fluvial-channel planforms, observed in the inactive part of the megafans, to the observed mean- dering and anastomosing forms in the active depositional lobes (Assine 2005, Assine et al. 2014). This event resulted in intense pedogenesis, which is reflected in aerially- and laterally-extensive horizons of preserved paleosols presen- ting both calcrete and ferricrete (Nascimento et al. 2015). The catchment area of the lowlands systems drain smaller and degraded areas of igneous and metamorphic source rocks from the Precambrian shield, providing relatively low amou- nts of sediment, and frequently resulting in sedimentary-load deficits, as observed in the Cuiabá Megafan (Pupim 2014). The interfan systems are also characterized by entrenched meander belts, which are similar in width and form to the meander belts developed in the upper portion of the above described megafans (Fig. 5). The regional base-level is determined by the Paraguay trunk river plains. Although abandoned parts of modern lobes do not receive water-flow from rivers, they do receive from pluvial runoff, especially during the wet sea- son, developing networks of tributary streams and reworking previously deposited sediments. These sediments can be rede- posited on interfan plains and potentially further transported by the river and delivered to the trunk river system. Fluvial-system processes act to compensate multiple envi- ronmental variables such as climate, basin settings, and the dynamics of depositional construction. The planform geome- tries that arise ultimately reflect the interplay of these envi- ronmental gradients. Alluvial rivers constantly regulate their depositional equilibrium through changes in channel and slope geometries, developing multiple styles as a response to different sets of variables (Tooth 2000, Nanson & Huang 2008). These variables are collectively classified as autogenic, i.e. related to the depositional environment (e.g. flow dyna- mics, sediment type), and allogenic, i.e. related to mechanisms which are external to the depositional dynamics (e.g. climatic fluctuations, tectonic dynamics). However, in natural condi- tions, the clear distinction between auto- and allogeneic pro- cess is not a simple task, because detailed field data are needed to quantify the relative importance of each process and due the complicated interactions among these controls exist (Miall 1996, Bridge 2003, Stouthamer & Berendsen 2007). Differential subsidence of distinct blocks of the Pantanal Basin, the rejuvenation of source-areas, base-level and river- -profile changes, and the reactivation of basin-boarder faults, are fundamental allogenic variables that need to be addressed in order to understand the particular depositional and flood dynamics of the Pantanal alluvial plains. Climate changes throughout time impact atmospheric precipitation, water availability, biogeography (e.g. vegetation cover), river dis- charge, and the nature of floods. Modern-day climate in the Pantanal is characterized by strong seasonality, with higher rates of precipitation occurring during the summer (December/March) and long flood periods (February/June). Autogenic controls in the Pantanal influence the transfer of sedimentary material from the terrains located on areas above base-level to areas which are created by newly-avai- lable accommodation space, balancing rates of erosion and sedimentation. Fan and interfan interactions are characte- rized by aggradation on some areas, while degradation pre- vails on other areas. Stream flow discharge, pluvial surface runoff, infiltration, water-residence period, types of surface flow, and river channel dynamics cooperatively influence the distinct types of fluvial styles developed in rivers of the Pantanal Basin. Allogenic controls influence the depositio- nal-systems dynamics of the Pantanal alluvial plain, and fre- quently result in river avulsions, a very well-known pheno- menon among the local population. Such avulsions occur after levee disruption and progradation of channel sediments over lowland floodplains, followed by distributary-channel development, and eventual main channel deviation to the newly formed one (Slingerland & Smith 2004, Assine 2005; Fig. 7). Combined effects of both auto- and allogenic con- trols can be observed throughout the Paraguay River fluvial plain. For example, the river develops a fluvial megafan at its entrance on the Pantanal Basin due to loss of confine- ment and, downstream, the river becomes meandering and flows in a vast floodbasin. The conjugation of uplif- ted basin-boarder fault at Serra do Amolar on the right margin and the progradation of the modern lobe of the Taquari River on the left margin of the Paraguay River constrain the channel and creates river bottleneck, favo- ring backwater flooding upstream of the Serra do Amolar. 485 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 Mario Luis Assine et al. The auto- and allogenic process have different effects in the Pantanal system-tract sedimentary dynamic. The long-term cycles as the channel pattern changes, and deposition-erosion cycles can be attributed to allogenic factors of which climate appears to have driven the main changes during the late Quaternary. The short-term cycles as avulsions in distal fluvial fans and meandering migration are mainly related to autogenic factors. CONCLUSION The Pantanal is an active sedimentary basin with faults and associated earthquakes reflecting distinct basin blocks subsidence. Accommodation space generation results in discrete groups of fans, megafans, interfans and floodplain systems. The present work shows the first classification according to hydro-sedimentological settings, a classifica- tion that allows a comprehensive distinction of the Pantanal alluvial systems, with each group being characterized by par- ticular geomorphologic features, hydrological regimes and sedimentological dynamics. The results presented herein highlight the role played by source areas and drainage sur- face flow in influencing sedimentation dynamics in fluvial systems. These roles originate a markedly complex hetero- geneity that can be easily depicted in the modern alluvial plain of the Pantanal Basin. ■ Tablelands-catchment fluvial fans in the eastern limits of the basin sourced by dissected sedimentary tablelands related to the Paraná Basin deposits comprise major examples of megafans with higher sediment load. The Taquari and São Lourenço present key examples of active megafan on the basin. These systems are characterized at Figure 7. An important avulsion is in progress in the Taquari River at the Caronal farm. (A) There are no important crevasses in September 1989 (Landsat TM5 R7G4B3 composite band); (B) Downstream the intersection point, many crevasses and distributary channels are present on the right margin of the Taquari River in August 2014 (Landsat 8 OLI R7G5B3 composite band). A B 486 Brazilian Journal of Geology, 45(3): 475-489, September 2015 The Quaternary alluvial systems tract of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil their entrance in the Pantanal by confined valleys, which are incised onto Pleistocene-aged deposits, and evolve at the distal portion by progradation of distributary lobes. Minor, and non active, systems are the Aquidauana, Negro, Taboco and Itiquira megafans. ■ Lowlands-catchment fluvial fans sourced by sediments from the surrounding Precambrian igneous and meta- morphic rocks represent the second category of mega- fans, with the representative Cuiabá megafan as the second largest within the basin. The sediment load of these megafans is considerably smaller than the table- lands-sourced fans. Other examples of these systems are the Paraguay, Miranda and Jaurú megafans. ■ Interfan fluvial systems represent smaller and confined floodplains developed at the fringe of major megafans systems, with different hydro-sedimentological settings characterized by downstream-increasing water discharge and sediment load, as a result of its confinement by the fringe of the megafans. The Itiquira and Negro interfan systems were mainly incised by perennial rivers, whereas the Corixo Grande and Negro (Bolivia) are intermittent and sourced mainly by distributary fan channels. ■ The Paraguay trunk-river plains is a complex geomor- phic system controlled by the Paraguay River develo- ping multiple styles from its entrance in the basin to its exit, where it joins the Chaco Basin further south. The river-mainstream plain comprises from north to south five distinct fluvial-floodplain compartments, each one presenting distinct depositional forms, channel pat- tern and hydrologic functioning. The Paraguay and the Nabileque megafans also play important roles on the floodplain affecting the water discharge and the sedi- ment yield, mainly during the annual floods. ■ Autogenic (e.g. flow dynamics, sediment type) and exogenous variables (e.g. climatic fluctuations, tectonic dynamics) control the evolution of the Pantanal Basin and its depositional systems. The variable nature of the rivers in the Pantanal basin provides evidence for paleohydrological changes that are controlled by avul- sion processes, fluvial discharge fluctuations and regio- nal base level variations that have been occurring since the Pleistocene. The Pantanal Basin provides modern analogues for sedi- mentation dynamics in sedimentary basins dominated by depositional alluvial systems tract under semiarid to humid climates, and the preserved architecture and facies assembla- ges of these systems can provide various insights on the pre- diction of genetically-related deposits in the rock record. The varied depositional tracts determined by different source areas can develop strikingly contrasting lithological geometries and facies assemblages at the same stratigraphic level. This situa- tion can lead to inaccurate interpretations if the influence of source areas on the preserved architecture and sedimentary facies are unaccounted for when studying fluvial successions in the rock record. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors thank the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP 2014/06889-2; 2014/13937-3; 2014/23334-4) for financial support to our research in the Pantanal Basin; the National Council of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq) for grants to MLA (308563/2013-1); Michael M. McGlue for critical evaluation and helpful suggestions to improve the text; Aguinaldo Silva for scientific collabora- tion and logistical support in the field; and the BJG editors Umberto G. Cordani and Claudio Riccomini for the invi- tation and encouragement to write this work. Ab’Sáber A.N. 1988. O Pantanal Mato-Grossense e a teoria dos refúgios. Revista Brasileira de Geografia, 50:9-57. Alho C.J.R. 2005. The Pantanal. In: Fraser L.H. & Keddy P.A. (ed.) 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