Vertical velocity fields along the Eastern Mediterranean coast as revealed by late Holocene sea-level markers

Author(s):  
Marco Liberatore ◽  
Domenico Cosentino ◽  
Elsa Gliozzi ◽  
Paola Cipollari ◽  
Nazik Öğretmen ◽  
...  

<p>Vertical movements of the solid surface reflect crustal deformation and mantle deep related phenomena. For Holocene times, coastlines displaced from the present mean sea level are often used, combined with past relative sea levels (RSL) prediction models, to clue the vertical deformational field. <br>Along the coast from south-western Turkey until Israel and Cyprus, a certain amount of good quality data is already published, leaving only a gap where data are absent along the Central Anatolian Plateau (CAP) coast. Based on new field observations along with this sector, between Adalia and Adana (Mersin, southern Turkey), together with AMS 14C dating, the gap is filled, allowing to describe an overall frame made by vertical differential movements along the Eastern Mediterranean coast. <br>Most recent Glacial Isostatic Adjustments (GIA) models have been used to remove the glacio-hydro isostatic component of the RSL. Different solutions from ICE-6G(VM5a) and ICE-7G(VM7) models (developed by W.R. Peltier and co-workers, Toronto University), as also a solution from the GIA model progressively developed by K. Lambeck and collaborators at the Australian National University, have been applied on 201 middle-to-late Holocene markers of RSL. Both GIA models have been implemented within the numerical Sea level Equation solver SELEN4.<br>Tectonic velocity has been therefore calculated. Starting from southwestern Turkey, subsidence has been found within the range between -0.91 mm/yr and -2.15 mm/yr confirming values from previous works. Velocities from the new markers along the CAP coast are positive ranging between 1.01 and 1.65 mm/yr. These two first blocks are separated by a sharp velocity contact, occurring along the complex fault zone of the Isparta Angle. Such values for the CAP margin were expected as recently published papers report high vertical velocities for a Middle to Late Pleistocene uplift event. Moving to the east, velocities are also positive, within 0.3-0.6 mm/yr, along the coast between the Hatay Gulf and southern Lebanon. The spiked profile of the Lebanese sector is likely due to co-seismic deformations along the Lebanese Restraining Bend faults (LRB). To the south, the Israeli coast is instead showing stability according to some unique RSL markers named piscinae while other markers indicate slow subsidence. Hence another velocity jump of at least 0.5 mm/yr is recognizable between Israel and Lebanon: it is probably associated with already known brittle structures. In northern Cyprus, the only Holocene sea-level marker confirms the almost zero vertical velocity values already obtained for the MIS 5e marine terrace. Therefore, a vertical velocity jump occurs between stable Cyprus and the uplifting CAP southern margin, although they are placed on the same overriding plate of the subduction system. High-angle normal faults at the northern margin of the Adana-Cilicia Basin could explain these different vertical velocity fields. <br>These results depict a complex frame of wide independently moving crustal blocks where kinematic separation occurs along well-known regional fault zones. Driving causes of the block movements could be related either to regional tectonics, as it probably is for the LRB coast, or to mantle dynamics, for the uplifting Turkish sector where deeper processes should be considered. </p>

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Mallinson ◽  
◽  
Stephen J. Culver ◽  
Eduardo Leorri ◽  
Ryan Mulligan

2021 ◽  
pp. 102002
Author(s):  
Toshiaki Irizuki ◽  
Jun Takahashi ◽  
Koji Seto ◽  
Hiroaki Ishiga ◽  
Yuki Fujihara ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 1453-1465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia F Daly ◽  
Daniel F Belknap ◽  
Joseph T Kelley ◽  
Trevor Bell

Differential sea-level change in formerly glaciated areas is predicted owing to variability in extent and timing of glacial coverage. Newfoundland is situated close to the margin of the former Laurentide ice sheet, and the orientation of the shoreline affords the opportunity to investigate variable rates and magnitudes of sea-level change. Analysis of salt-marsh records at four sites around the island yields late Holocene sea-level trends. These trends indicate differential sea-level change in recent millennia. A north–south geographic trend reflects submergence in the south, very slow sea-level rise in the northeast, and a recent transition from falling to rising sea-level at the base of the Northern Peninsula. This variability is best explained as a continued isostatic response to deglaciation.


Author(s):  
Daniel J. King ◽  
Rewi M. Newnham ◽  
W. Roland Gehrels ◽  
Kate J. Clark

2007 ◽  
Vol 242 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 27-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arto Miettinen ◽  
Henrik Jansson ◽  
Teija Alenius ◽  
Georg Haggrén

2015 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 214-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Barnett ◽  
W. Roland Gehrels ◽  
Dan J. Charman ◽  
Margot H. Saher ◽  
William A. Marshall

2010 ◽  
Vol 225 (2) ◽  
pp. 160-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Brückner ◽  
D. Kelterbaum ◽  
O. Marunchak ◽  
A. Porotov ◽  
A. Vött

Polar Record ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naja Mikkelsen ◽  
Antoon Kuijpers ◽  
Jette Arneborg

ABSTRACTNorse immigrants from Europe settled in southern Greenland in around AD 985 and managed to create a farming community during the Medieval Warm Period. The Norse vanished after approximately 500 years of existence in Greenland leaving no documentary evidence concerning why their culture foundered. The flooding of fertile grassland caused by late Holocene sea-level changes may be one of the factors that affected the Norse community. Holocene sea-level changes in Greenland are closely connected with the isostatic response of the Earth's crust to the behaviour of the Greenlandic ice sheet. An early Holocene regressive phase in south and west Greenland was reversed during the middle Holocene, and evidence is found for transgression and drowning of early-middle Holocene coast lines. This drowning started between 8 and 7ka BP in southern Greenland and continued during the Norse era to the present. An average late Holocene sea level rise in the order of 2–3 m/1000 years may be one of the factors that negatively affected the life of the Norse Greenlanders, and combined with other both socio-economic and environmental problems, such as increasing wind and sea ice expansion at the transition to the Little Ice Age, may eventually have led to the end of the Norse culture in Greenland.


Terra Nova ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen E. Lewis ◽  
Raphael A. J. Wüst ◽  
Jody M. Webster ◽  
Graham A. Shields

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