shore displacement
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2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 100042
Author(s):  
Viljami Perheentupa ◽  
Ville Mäkinen ◽  
Hando-Laur Habicht ◽  
Juha Oksanen

The Holocene ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 1205-1219
Author(s):  
Nichola Ann Strandberg ◽  
Aleftin Barliaev ◽  
Helene Martinsson-Wallin ◽  
Jan Risberg ◽  
Martina Hättestrand ◽  
...  

Using diatoms, pollen, and geochemistry, we explore human habitation around Lina myr, Gotland, in relation to shore displacement. Archeological evidence has shown that Lina myr was an important area for its prehistoric human inhabitants. We investigate if and when Lina myr was connected to the sea and could therefore have been part of an inland water system useful for transport. A chronology was based on 14C AMS dating of terrestrial macrofossils and bulk sediments with dates ranging between 9100 and 2360 cal. yr BP. The initiation of the Littorina transgression was dated to 8500 cal. yr BP. A twofold pattern for the maximum sub-phase of the Littorina Sea is suggested from 8100 to 7500 cal. yr BP and from 6500 to 6000 cal. yr BP. The onset of cultivation and grazing was indicated by the presence of Hordeum and Plantago lanceolata in the pollen record during the Late Neolithic, at about 4580 cal. yr BP. During this time sea level was relatively higher than today and the Lina myr basin was connected with the Littorina Sea, which it continued to be until isostatic uplift caused it to become isolated at about 3820 cal. yr BP. After about 3000 cal. yr BP, human-made landscape changes intensified, grasslands increased, and shrublands decreased.


The Holocene ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Triine Nirgi ◽  
Alar Rosentau ◽  
Hando-Laur Habicht ◽  
Tiit Hang ◽  
Tõnno Jonuks ◽  
...  

The shore displacement and palaeogeography of the Pärnu Bay area, eastern Baltic Sea, during the Stone Age, were reconstructed using sedimentological and archaeological proxies and GIS-based landscape modelling. We discovered and studied buried palaeochannel sediments on the coastal lowland and in the shallow offshore of the Pärnu Bay and interpreted these data together with previously published shore displacement evidence. The reconstructed relative shore-level (RSL) curve is based on 78 radiocarbon dates from sediment sequences and archaeological sites in the Pärnu Bay area and reported here using the HOLSEA sea-level database format. The new RSL curve displays regressive water levels at −5.5 and −4 m a.s.l. before the Ancylus Lake and Litorina Sea transgressions, respectively. According to the curve, the total water-level rise during the Ancylus Lake transgression (10.7–10.2 cal. ka BP) was around 18 m, with the average rate of rise about 35 mm per annum, while during the Litorina Sea transgression (8.5–7.3 cal. ka BP), the water level rose around 14 m, with average rate of 12 mm per annum. During the short period around 7.8–7.6 cal. ka BP, the RSL rose in Pärnu, but probably also in Samsø (Denmark), Blekinge (Sweden) and Narva-Luga (NE Estonia–NW Russia), faster than the concurrent eustatic sea level calculated from the far-field sites. The palaeogeographic reconstructions show the settlement patterns of the coastal landscape since the Mesolithic and provide new perspective for looking Mesolithic hunter-fisher-gatherer settlement sites on the banks of the submerged ca. 9000 years old river channel in the bottom of the present-day Pärnu Bay.


Geomorphology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 303 ◽  
pp. 434-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merle Muru ◽  
Alar Rosentau ◽  
Frank Preusser ◽  
Jüri Plado ◽  
Ivo Sibul ◽  
...  

Boreas ◽  
2013 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Alar Rosentau ◽  
Merle Muru ◽  
Aivar Kriiska ◽  
Dmitry A. Subetto ◽  
Jüri Vassiljev ◽  
...  

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