A review of MIS 5e sea-level proxies around Japan
Sea-level proxies for Marine Isotopic Stage 5e (MIS 5e, ca. 124 ka) are abundant along the Japanese shoreline and have been documented for over at least the past 60 years. The bulk of these sea-level proxies are identified in Japan as marine terraces, often correlated by stratigraphic relationships...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Earth system science data 2021-04, Vol.13 (4), p.1477-1497 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Sea-level proxies for Marine Isotopic Stage 5e (MIS 5e, ca. 124 ka) are abundant along the Japanese shoreline and have been documented for
over at least the past 60 years. The bulk of these sea-level proxies are
identified in Japan as marine terraces, often correlated by stratigraphic
relationships to identified tephra layers, or other chronologically
interpreted strata. Use of stratigraphic correlation in conjunction with
other techniques such as paleontological analysis, tectonic uplift rates,
tephra (volcanic ash), uranium–thorium (U–Th), and carbon-14 (14C)
dating have connected Japan's landforms to global patterns of
sea-level change. This paper reviews over 60 years of publications
containing sea-level proxies correlated with MIS 5e in Japan. Data collected
for this review have been added to the World Atlas of Last Interglacial
Shorelines (WALIS), following their standardizations on the elements
necessary to analyze paleosea-levels. This paper reviewed over 70 studies,
assembling data points for over 300 locations and examining related papers
denoting sea-level indicators for MIS 5e. The database compiled for this
review (Tam and Yokoyama, 2020) is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4294326. Sea-level proxy studies in Japan
rely heavily on chronostratigraphic techniques and are recognized as
reliable, though opportunities exist for further constraining through the
further use of numerical age dating techniques. |
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ISSN: | 1866-3516 1866-3508 1866-3516 |
DOI: | 10.5194/essd-13-1477-2021 |