Palynomorphs from Late Holocene sediments of the eutrophic Lake Manyas, NW Anatolia

2019 ◽  
Vol 269 ◽  
pp. 1-32
Author(s):  
Hatice Kutluk
2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 186-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
DONG Jin ◽  
GAO Rui ◽  
WANG Yong ◽  
ZHANG Shihong ◽  
YAO Peiyi ◽  
...  

The Holocene ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (9) ◽  
pp. 1452-1466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Rodríguez-Pérez ◽  
Ana María Blázquez ◽  
Jordi Guillem ◽  
Juan Usera

The sedimentological and micropaleontological analysis of three mechanical cores in the marshland of Almenara (Valencian Community, Spain) has allowed the reconstruction of the Holocene evolution of this wetland. The cold and dry 8.2-ka event might be represented in Almenara by a massive carbonate precipitation bed, upon which mid- and late-Holocene sediments were subsequently deposited. The direct influence of sea-level changes has been recorded in the two cores (S-4 and S-5) located near the marsh barrier, at 400–450 m from the current coastline. The maximum flood area during MIS 1 (last 11,600 years) is represented in these cores by sediments indicative of different littoral subenvironments (shoreface, foreshore, backshore). These sediments contain typically littoral marine foraminiferal species such as Ammonia beccarii, Rosalina globularis, Asterigerinata mamilla, Adelosina longirostra, Cibicidoides lobatulus, Elphidium macellum, and Bolivina pseudoplicata. The base of these littoral sedimentary materials has been dated as 5480 and 5580 cal. yr BP. At this moment, the inner area (core S-7) was occupied by a restricted oligohaline marsh subject to water-table fluctuations and with scarce individuals of brackish water foraminifera, such as Ammonia tepida, Haynesina germanica, or Cribroelphidium excavatum, that in more recent times (since at least 1700 cal. yr BP) gradually evolved to a palustrine area.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Selena Baldan ◽  
Philip S.J. Minderhoud ◽  
Claudia Zoccarato ◽  
Pietro Teatini

<p>The Vietnamese Mekong River Delta has been formed by the deposition of soft, fine-grained sediments during the last thousands of years. Natural compaction of these unconsolidated deposits over time and with increased overburden load is one of the main drivers of subsidence in this delta. High rates of natural compaction may have a considerable increased flood vulnerability of the lowly elevated delta plain and ultimately result in permanent inundation.</p><p>Following the loading history of accumulating sediments during the Holocene delta evolution, it is possible to estimate delta-wide present-day natural compaction rates. The ultimate goal of this study is to provide reliable input data on Holocene sedimentation rate throughout the Mekong Delta for a novel 3D numerical model to simulate delta formation and its dynamic evolution during the late Holocene. In order to achieve this, it is fundamental to first take into account previous compaction that already happened to the sediments in the past to estimate the original sedimentation rate of Holocene sediments.</p><p>We employed a 1D decompaction module to compute the original, uncompacted thickness of Holocene delta sequences from lithological borelogs to estimate the amount of virgin sediment that has been deposited in time. The original thickness of Holocene sediments was determined after investigating geomechanical properties of Holocene deposits and decompaction of lithological boreholes spread over the delta. To determine the sedimentation rate for the borelogs with missing dating information, the age was estimated by using a linear distance interpolation of age isochrones starting from a limited number of boreholes, where both stratigraphy and sediment ages are available.</p><p>As a final step, the estimated sedimentation rates from each of the borelogs are interpolated to arrive at delta-wide sedimentation rates and lithology during the Late Holocene. This provides the required input data for the 3D model to simulate natural consolidation during the delta evolution and accurately assess present natural compaction rates.</p>


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