A Drowned Lagunar Channel in the Southern Brazilian Coast in Response to the 8.2-ka Event: Diatom and Seismic Stratigraphy

Drowning of the coast was initiated by a marine inundation after the Last Glacial Maximum (marine isotope stage (MIS) 2) and has continued during the mid-Holocene and highstand (MIS 1). Detailed analyses of two previously examined core stratigraphy and seismic profiles combined with new grain-size a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Estuaries and coasts 2018-09, Vol.41 (6), p.1601-1625
Hauptverfasser: dos Santos-Fischer, Cristiane Bahi, Weschenfelder, Jair, Corrêa, Iran Carlos Stalliviere, Stone, Jeffery Robert, Dehnhardt, Beatriz Appel, Bortolin, Eduardo Calixto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Drowning of the coast was initiated by a marine inundation after the Last Glacial Maximum (marine isotope stage (MIS) 2) and has continued during the mid-Holocene and highstand (MIS 1). Detailed analyses of two previously examined core stratigraphy and seismic profiles combined with new grain-size and detailed diatom analyses are used to study the history of the Barra Falsa paleochannel over the last 11,000 years BP and to document the peculiar deposition within the channel fill. A rapid sea-level rise was responsible for flooding the coast in 11,180-10,780, 8420-7930, 8150-7870, and 7640-7430 cal years BP, infilling a low topographic back-barrier region. High deposition rates suggest a rapid filling of the channel, which coincides with an accelerated period of sea-level rise, closely linked to the global 8.2-ka event. The morphology of the channel is recognized by facies units in the underlying strata related to one episode of cut and fill during a single cycle of base-level fall and rise. An overall transgressive sequence above the regional surface is related to marine and marine-brackish sediments, which corresponds to a seaward/central basil fill of a wave-dominated estuary.
ISSN:1559-2723
1559-2731
DOI:10.1007/s12237-018-0373-z