DocumentCode :
407208
Title :
Step-like rise of post-glacial sea level and geological implications
Author :
Milliman, J.D. ; Liu, J. Paul
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Marine Sci., Coll. of William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA, USA
Volume :
3
fYear :
2003
fDate :
22-26 Sept. 2003
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Post-last glacial maximum (post-LGM) sea-level transgression was punctuated by six relatively short flooding events that collectively accounted for more than 90 m of the 120-m rise. Annual sea-level rise during the two major flooding events (MWP-1A and 1B, 14.3-14.1 and 11.6-11.4 calendar ka BP, respectively) averaged /spl sim/60-80 mm/yr, compared to 2-3 mm/y during periods of slow transgression. Most (but not all) of the floodings appear to correspond with paleoclimatic events recorded in Greenland and Antarctic ice-cores, indicative of the close coupling between rapid climate change, glacial melt, and corresponding sea-level rise. The punctuated transgression produced a series of rapid flooding surfaces on shelves. During MWP-1A (14.3-14.1 ka BP), for example, sea level on the epicontinental East China and Yellow seas transgressed horizontally more than 2000 m/yr, compared to <25 m/yr before and after. Seismic and chronostratigraphic evidence of two prominent flooding surfaces on the Kiso River delta (southern Japan) correlate with MWP-1B and 1C; delineating other post-LGM examples will require long cores that penetrate flooding surfaces identified in high-resolution seismic profiles.
Keywords :
climatology; glaciology; oceanographic regions; Antarctic ice-core; Greenland; Kiso River delta; Yellow Sea; chronostratigraphic evidence; close coupling; epicontinental East China Sea; geology; glacial melt; high-resolution seismic profile; major flooding event; paleoclimatic event; post-LGM; post-glacial sea level; post-last glacial maximum; punctuated transgression; rapid climate change; rapid flooding surface; sea-level transgression; seismic evidence; short flooding event; slow transgression; southern Japan; step-like sea level rise; Antarctica; Calendars; Educational institutions; Floods; Geology; Rivers; Sea level; Sea surface;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2003. Proceedings
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-933957-30-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2003.178022
Filename :
1282535
Link To Document :
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