SEA-LEVELS, LATE QUATERNARY | High Latitudes

2007 ◽  
pp. 3052-3064
Author(s):  
C. ÓCofaigh ◽  
M.J. Bentley
2003 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 957-968 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Brunhoff ◽  
K. E. Galbreath ◽  
V. B. Fedorov ◽  
J. A. Cook ◽  
M. Jaarola

1988 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.O. Emery ◽  
A.S. Merrill ◽  
E.R.M. Druffel

About 2000 large sediment samples were collected during the early 1960s throughout the continental shelf off the Atlantic coast of the United States to establish and map sediment types including sediments relict from times of glacially low (and subsequently higher) sea levels. In about 510 of these samples we found fossil shells of mollusks remaining from environmental conditions different from those at present. Publications and collections by others contain about 70 additional samples having relict mollusks. Some of these shells indicate lower sea levels, others colder water, and still others warmer water than is now present. Radiocarbon measurements from earlier studies by us and others established the dates of colder water (late Pleistocene), and we made additional measurements to learn the dates of warmer water (about 1000 to 2000 yr B.P.). The results show reasonably enough that continental shelves are the sites of relict faunas as well as of sediments that indicate changed and complex environmental histories.


1996 ◽  
Vol 141 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 227-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Chappell ◽  
Akio Omura ◽  
Tezer Esat ◽  
Malcolm McCulloch ◽  
John Pandolfi ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 341-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. Andrews ◽  
R. M. Retherford

A preliminary relative sea level curve that covers the last 10 200 years is derived for the area of the islands and outer mainland centered on Bella Bella and Namu, the central coast of British Columbia. The curve shows postglacial emergence of 17 m over this period. The rate of emergence was ~0.6 m/100 year about 9000 BP, and present sea level was attained between 7000 and 8000 BP. Relative sea level continued to fall until the last few hundred to one thousand years BP when a marine transgression led to a rise of sea level and resultant erosion of many coastal Indian middens. Marine limits on the outer islands may reach 120 m asl, whereas in the middle part of the fiord country observed delta surfaces are lower (54–75 m asl). Elevations of raised deltas then attain ~150 m at fiord heads. A readvance of the ice front ≤ 12 210 ± 330 BP (GSC-1351) is suggested by the stratigraphy of one section.


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth Glennie ◽  
Steven Fryberger ◽  
Caroline Hern ◽  
Nicholas Lancaster ◽  
James Teller ◽  
...  

AbstractIn the Wahiba Sands of eastern Oman, luminescence dating of sands enables us to relate wind activity to climatic variations and the monsoon cycle. These changes resulted from Polar glacial/interglacial cyclicity and changes in global sea levels and wind strengths. Luminescence dates show that development of the Sands began over 230 ka ago when the sand-driving winds were the locally arid, northward-blowing SW Monsoon.During late Quaternary low sea levels, the Tigris-Euphrates river system flowed across the floor of the Persian/Arabian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman SE of the Strait of Hormuz. OSL-dated sands containing calcareous bioclastic fragments deflated from the exposed Gulf floor during glacial low-water periods indicate that during the last glacial cycle, and at least one earlier cycle (∼120–200 ka and possibly as far back as 291 ka), the floor of the Arabian Gulf was exposed. This is deduced from the presence of aeolian dune sands containing bioclastic detritus on the coastal plain of the Emirates and south into Al Liwa (Abu Dhabi), which were built by northern “Shamal” winds. Those calcareous sands now locally overlie sabkhas formed during interglacial high sea levels. Within the present interglacial, marine flooding of the Gulf occurred between about 12 and 6 ka.


1978 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 204-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald Lee Johnson

Pygmy proboscidean remains of Mammuthus exilis occur abundantly in late Quaternary deposits on the Northern Channel Islands, California. On the assumption that ancestral elephants could not have swum to the islands and must therefore have walked out, various land bridges have been hypothesized that link the northern islands to the mainland by a peninsula. Geological evidence for a land bridge, however, is lacking, and new evidence shows that elephants are excellent swimmers and skilled at crossing watergaps. The Santa Barbara Channel was narrowed to only 6 km during glacially lowered sea levels. Modern elephants swim much further, and at speeds ranging from 0.96–2.70 km/hr. Motives for California elephants to cross Pleistocene watergaps are inferred from motives that lead modern elephants in Asia and Africa to cross watergaps. These are the visual and olfactory sensing of islands and of insular food during times of drought or fire-induced food shortage. Diminutive size of M. exilis principally reflects lack of island predators, an adaption to periodic food stress in a finite forage area affected by periodic drought and fire, and an adaptation for keeping population numbers high to maintain genetic variability and to ensure survival despite accidents. A late Quaternary scenario describes the environmental setting of the Santa Barbara Channel and the conditions that led to proboscidean dispersal to the preexistent super-island Santarosae.


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