Complex exposure-burial history and Pleistocene sediment recycling in the dead sea rift with implications for the age of the Acheulean site of ‘Ubeidiya

  • A. Matmon*
  • , A. Kuzmenko
  • , R. Shaar
  • , P. Nuriel
  • , A. Hidy
  • , M. Guillong
  • , R. Blevis
  • , N. Wieler
  • , S. Vainer
  • , Y. Asscher
  • , M. Belmaker
  • , O. Barzilai
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We present early Pleistocene burial ages of the ‘Ubeidiya Formation sediments in the Jordan Valley, a segment of the Dead Sea Rift Valley. A minimum age of ∼1.1 Ma is constrained both by paleomagnetic analysis and U-Pb dating of Melanopsis shells. Simple cosmogenic burial ages (i.e., one very long exposure period followed by one period of burial) calculated from the ratios of 26Al to 10Be and 10Be concentrations indicate ages of ∼3 Ma, contradicting the geological and paleomagnetic constraints as well as a reasonable age of the ‘Ubeidiya archeological site, as it contains human remains. A more sophisticated way of treating the results, by combining numerical modeling of cosmogenic nuclide build up during repeated burial-exposure cycles, paleomagnetic analysis (indicating reverse polarity) and a minimum burial age of 1.1 Ma set by U-Pb dating of Melanopsis shells, suggests two most probable time slots (1.19-1.77 and 1.93- 2.14 Ma) for the absolute age of the ‘Ubeidiya Formation. However, the skewed distribution of cosmogenic isotope burial ages, with a median age of 2.05 Ma, indicates a much higher probability of the older ages, most likely >1.9 Ma. The exposure-burial history that emerges from the model implies recycling of sediments previously deposited and buried in the rift valley, between 4.5 and 3.2 Ma, and subsequently exhumed, eroded, transported and then redeposited along the ‘Ubeidiya paleo lake shoreline.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109871
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume378
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Apr 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd.

Keywords

  • Acheulean
  • Cosmogenic isotopes burial dating
  • Paleomagnetism
  • U-Pb
  • ‘Ubeidiya formation

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