A study on marine notches between Rameswaram and Kanyakumari and their implication on the sea level changes, East coast of India

2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 2729-2738 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Dajkumar Sahayam ◽  
S. Krishna Kumar ◽  
M. Suresh Gandhi ◽  
N. Chandrasekar ◽  
G. Victor Rajamanickam
2020 ◽  
Vol 553 ◽  
pp. 60-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chinmay Dash ◽  
Manoj K. Jaiswal ◽  
Pitambar Pati ◽  
Narendra Kumar Patel ◽  
Atul Kumar Singh ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Domingues ◽  
Gustavo Goni ◽  
Molly Baringer ◽  
Denis Volkov

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lisa McCarthy

<p>The Branch Sandstone is located within an overall transgressive, marine sedimentary succession in Marlborough, on the East Coast of New Zealand’s South Island. It has previously been interpreted as an anomalous sedimentary unit that was inferred to indicate abrupt and dramatic shallowing. The development of a presumed short-lived regressive deposit was thought to reflect a change in relative sea level, which had significant implications for the geological history of the Marlborough region, and regionally for the East Coast Basin.  The distribution and lithology of Branch Sandstone is described in detail from outcrop studies at Branch Stream, and through the compilation of existing regional data. Two approximately correlative sections from the East Coast of the North Island (Tangaruhe Stream and Angora Stream) are also examined to provide regional context. Depositional environments were interpreted using sedimentology and palynology, and age control was developed from dinoflagellate biostratigraphy. Data derived from these methods were combined with the work of previous authors to establish depositional models for each section which were then interpreted in the context of relative sea level fluctuations.  At Branch Stream, Branch Sandstone is interpreted as a shelfal marine sandstone, that disconformably overlies Herring Formation. The Branch Sandstone is interpreted as a more distal deposit than uppermost Herring Formation, whilst the disconformity is suggested to have developed during a fall in relative sea level. At Branch Stream, higher frequency tectonic or eustatic sea-level changes can therefore be distinguished within a passive margin sedimentary sequence, where sedimentation broadly reflects subsidence following rifting of the Tasman Sea. Development of a long-lived disconformity at Tangaruhe Stream and deposition of sediment gravity flow deposits at Angora Stream occurred at similar times to the fall in relative sea level documented at the top of the Herring Formation at Branch Stream. These features may reflect a basin-wide relative sea-level event, that coincides with global records of eustatic sea level fall.</p>


The Holocene ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 1679-1693
Author(s):  
Thomas M Cronin ◽  
Megan K Clevenger ◽  
Neil E Tibert ◽  
Tammy Prescott ◽  
Michael Toomey ◽  
...  

We reconstructed the last 10,000 years of Holocene relative sea-level rise (RSLR) from sediment core records near Chesapeake Bay, eastern United States, including new marsh records from the Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers, Virginia. Results show mean RSLR rates of 2.6 mm yr−1 from 10 to 8 kilo-annum (ka) due to combined final ice-sheet melting during deglaciation and glacio-isostatic adjustment (GIA subsidence). Mean RSLR rates from ~6 ka to present were 1.4 mm yr−1 due mainly to GIA, consistent with other East Coast marsh records and geophysical models. However, a progressively slower mean rate (<1.0 mm yr−1) characterized the last 1000 years when a multi-century-long period of tidal marsh development occurred during the ‘Medieval Climate Anomaly’ (MCA) and ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA) in the Chesapeake Bay region and other East Coast marshes. This decrease was most likely due to climatic and glaciological processes and, correcting for GIA, represents a fall in global mean sea level (GMSL) near the end of Holocene Neoglacial cooling. These pre-historical climate- and GIA-driven Chesapeake Bay sea-level changes contrast sharply with those based on Chesapeake Bay tide-gauge rates (3.1–4.5 mm yr−1) (back to 1903). After subtracting the GIA subsidence component, these rates can be attributed to long-term (millennial) global factors of accelerated ocean thermal expansion (~1.0 mm yr−1) and mass loss from alpine glaciers and Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets (1.5–2.0 mm yr−1).


2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kakani Nageswara Rao ◽  
Shilpa Pandey ◽  
Sumiko Kubo ◽  
Yoshiki Saito ◽  
K. Ch. V. Naga Kumar ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 427 ◽  
pp. 106229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kakani Nageswara Rao ◽  
Yoshiki Saito ◽  
K.Ch.V. Naga Kumar ◽  
Sumiko Kubo ◽  
Shilpa Pandey ◽  
...  

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