scholarly journals Sedimentary Processes and the Holocene Development of Palmyra Atoll, Equatorial Pacific Ocean

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kim Nicole Owen

<p>Coral atolls are unique landforms in that they are the physical manifestations of the interplay between both biological and geological processes. Prominent amongst these processes is the ability of the reef organisms to produce CaCO3 and its subsequent erosion and dispersal as sediment. Overriding controls on this process are organic productivity, wave energy, and relative sea level. The development and stability of atolls are thus critically dependent on the balance between several processes which may change over time. Atolls are regarded as being particularly vulnerable to environmental change. This study investigates the Holocene geological history of Palmyra atoll, at 5°52’N 162°04’W, in the northern Line Islands. Beachrock is used as an indicator of (a) paleo-sea level and (b) paleo-shoreline conditions from clasts trapped within the beachrock matrix. The study also models annual CaCO3 production and hydrodynamic conditions at the sea bed to provide an integrated assessment of the past and present sedimentary processes and reef island development at Palmyra Atoll. The atoll is currently the focus of intensive scientific study by the Palmyra Atoll Research Consortium and is particularly suited to this study because of the reduced human presence. This allows the examination of the relationship between beachrock, islet development and other processes, in an environment lacking ongoing anthropogenic development. Beachrock was found at 10 locations at Palmyra Atoll and yielded 14C ages ranging from 1249 to 105 cal. yrs BP. Typically, the beachrock contains mostly coral and algal clasts and is thought to form in the intertidal zone. Continual wetting and drying throughout a tidal cycle results in the precipitation of marine phreatic cements, which thus, indicate paleo-shorelines and sea level elevation. The production of CaCO3 sediment at Palmyra was estimated using reef habitat zones from Hopley (1996) and suggests that the most productive areas are reef terraces and the reef edge. An estimate total of 91,500 tonnes of CaCO3 is produced annually on the reefs, although only approximately 9 % of this becomes sediment that remains on the reef islands. Hydrodynamic processes were modelled using the SWAN model, a bathymetric grid from NOAA, and bottom conditions estimated from other studies. Input parameters were determined using a 13 year WAVEWATCHIII hindcast model of the wave climate for the central Pacific, as well as estimations of extreme wave events. Sediment transport was inferred from the modelled bed shear stress and these results show that to form most of the beachrock outcrops on Palmyra extremely strong wave action must be coupled with a higher sea level in order to allow the propagation of wave energy across the reef to some of the island shorelines. Integration of all results suggests that growth of the reef islands at Palmyra Atoll was initiated as the sea level fell from the mid-Holocene Highstand, 1-2 m above present mean sea level. The islands subsequently grew progressively eastward, forming 3-4 island chains which strike north or northeast. The beachrock that formed on these island provided protection from later wave erosion. Despite limitations caused by lack of climatic and other environmental data due to the isolation of the study area, results are reliable and highlight the application of beachrock as a proxy for past climates and sea levels.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kim Nicole Owen

<p>Coral atolls are unique landforms in that they are the physical manifestations of the interplay between both biological and geological processes. Prominent amongst these processes is the ability of the reef organisms to produce CaCO3 and its subsequent erosion and dispersal as sediment. Overriding controls on this process are organic productivity, wave energy, and relative sea level. The development and stability of atolls are thus critically dependent on the balance between several processes which may change over time. Atolls are regarded as being particularly vulnerable to environmental change. This study investigates the Holocene geological history of Palmyra atoll, at 5°52’N 162°04’W, in the northern Line Islands. Beachrock is used as an indicator of (a) paleo-sea level and (b) paleo-shoreline conditions from clasts trapped within the beachrock matrix. The study also models annual CaCO3 production and hydrodynamic conditions at the sea bed to provide an integrated assessment of the past and present sedimentary processes and reef island development at Palmyra Atoll. The atoll is currently the focus of intensive scientific study by the Palmyra Atoll Research Consortium and is particularly suited to this study because of the reduced human presence. This allows the examination of the relationship between beachrock, islet development and other processes, in an environment lacking ongoing anthropogenic development. Beachrock was found at 10 locations at Palmyra Atoll and yielded 14C ages ranging from 1249 to 105 cal. yrs BP. Typically, the beachrock contains mostly coral and algal clasts and is thought to form in the intertidal zone. Continual wetting and drying throughout a tidal cycle results in the precipitation of marine phreatic cements, which thus, indicate paleo-shorelines and sea level elevation. The production of CaCO3 sediment at Palmyra was estimated using reef habitat zones from Hopley (1996) and suggests that the most productive areas are reef terraces and the reef edge. An estimate total of 91,500 tonnes of CaCO3 is produced annually on the reefs, although only approximately 9 % of this becomes sediment that remains on the reef islands. Hydrodynamic processes were modelled using the SWAN model, a bathymetric grid from NOAA, and bottom conditions estimated from other studies. Input parameters were determined using a 13 year WAVEWATCHIII hindcast model of the wave climate for the central Pacific, as well as estimations of extreme wave events. Sediment transport was inferred from the modelled bed shear stress and these results show that to form most of the beachrock outcrops on Palmyra extremely strong wave action must be coupled with a higher sea level in order to allow the propagation of wave energy across the reef to some of the island shorelines. Integration of all results suggests that growth of the reef islands at Palmyra Atoll was initiated as the sea level fell from the mid-Holocene Highstand, 1-2 m above present mean sea level. The islands subsequently grew progressively eastward, forming 3-4 island chains which strike north or northeast. The beachrock that formed on these island provided protection from later wave erosion. Despite limitations caused by lack of climatic and other environmental data due to the isolation of the study area, results are reliable and highlight the application of beachrock as a proxy for past climates and sea levels.</p>


Author(s):  
Nikolay Esin ◽  
Nikolay Esin ◽  
Vladimir Ocherednik ◽  
Vladimir Ocherednik

A mathematical model describing the change in the Black Sea level depending on the Aegean Sea level changes is presented in the article. Calculations have shown that the level of the Black Sea has been repeating the course of the Aegean Sea level for the last at least 6,000 years. And the level of the Black Sea above the Aegean Sea level in the tens of centimeters for this period of time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1424
Author(s):  
Lucas Terres de Lima ◽  
Sandra Fernández-Fernández ◽  
João Francisco Gonçalves ◽  
Luiz Magalhães Filho ◽  
Cristina Bernardes

Sea-level rise is a problem increasingly affecting coastal areas worldwide. The existence of free and open-source models to estimate the sea-level impact can contribute to improve coastal management. This study aims to develop and validate two different models to predict the sea-level rise impact supported by Google Earth Engine (GEE)—a cloud-based platform for planetary-scale environmental data analysis. The first model is a Bathtub Model based on the uncertainty of projections of the sea-level rise impact module of TerrSet—Geospatial Monitoring and Modeling System software. The validation process performed in the Rio Grande do Sul coastal plain (S Brazil) resulted in correlations from 0.75 to 1.00. The second model uses the Bruun rule formula implemented in GEE and can determine the coastline retreat of a profile by creatting a simple vector line from topo-bathymetric data. The model shows a very high correlation (0.97) with a classical Bruun rule study performed in the Aveiro coast (NW Portugal). Therefore, the achieved results disclose that the GEE platform is suitable to perform these analysis. The models developed have been openly shared, enabling the continuous improvement of the code by the scientific community.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ole Bennike ◽  
Bernd Wagner ◽  
Andreas Richter

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-59
Author(s):  
Caihong Wen ◽  
Arun Kumar ◽  
Michelle L’ Heureux ◽  
Yan Xue ◽  
Emily Becker

AbstractThe relationship between the Warm Water Volume (WWV) ENSO precursor and ENSO SST weakened substantially after ~2000, coinciding with a degradation in dynamical model ENSO prediction skill. It is important to understand the drivers of the equatorial thermocline temperature variations and their linkage to ENSO onsets. In this study, a set of ocean reanalyses is employed to assess factors responsible for the variation of the equatorial Pacific Ocean thermocline during 1982-2019. Off-equatorial thermocline temperature anomalies carried equatorward by the mean meridional currents associated with Pacific Tropical Cells are shown to play an important role in modulating the central equatorial thermocline variations, which is rarely discussed in the literature. Further, ENSO events are delineated into two groups based on precursor mechanisms: the western equatorial type (WEP) ENSO, when the central equatorial thermocline is mainly influenced by the zonal propagation of anomalies from the western Pacific, and the off-equatorial central Pacific (OCP) ENSO, when off-equatorial central thermocline anomalies play the primary role. WWV is found to precede all WEP ENSO by 6-9 months, while the correlation is substantially lower for OCP ENSO events. In contrast, the central tropical Pacific (CTP) precursor, which includes off-equatorial thermocline signals, has a very robust lead correlation with the OCP ENSO. Most OCP ENSO events are found to follow the same ENSO conditions, and the number of OCP ENSO increases substantially since the 21st century. These results highlight the importance of monitoring off-equatorial subsurface preconditions for ENSO prediction and to understand multi-year ENSO.


Geomorphology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 107860
Author(s):  
Bettina S. Bozi ◽  
Beatriz L. Figueiredo ◽  
Erika Rodrigues ◽  
Marcelo C.L. Cohen ◽  
Luiz C.R. Pessenda ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uwe Morgenstern ◽  
Zara Rawlinson

&lt;p&gt;Geologic data to provide information on the functioning of aquifers is often scars. For the aquifers underlying the Heretaunga Plains, Hawkes Bay, one of New Zealand&amp;#8217;s most important groundwater systems, we used groundwater age (tritium, SF6, 14C) to inform the geologic model and to provide information on groundwater flow through alternating strata of permeable river gravel beds and fine impermeable beds that form an interconnected unconfined&amp;#8211;confined aquifer system with complex groundwater flow processes.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The aquifers are a result of geological processes responding to climate change cycles from cold glacial when sea level was more than 100m below present sea level, to warm interglacial periods with sea level similar to present day. Glacial climate strata are river gravel, sand and silt deposits and include the artesian aquifers. The interglacial strata form the aquicludes and are marine sand, silt, and clay deposits with interbedded estuarine, swamp and coastal fluvial silt, clay, peat and gravel deposits.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;We have re-visited tracer data sampled during the drilling of multi-level observation well in the early 1990s, and collected new samples from these multi-level bores in order to understand in 3D the groundwater recharge sources, groundwater recharge and flow rates, connection to the rivers, and potential groundwater discharge out to sea. Consistently young water (c. 25 years) at depth greater than 100m indicates preferential flow paths, likely related to paleo-river channels. The flow pattern obtained from the water tracer data improves the geologic information from the drill-holes, and fits with information from recent airborne transient electromagnetic (SkyTEM) geophysical surveys.&lt;/p&gt;


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