A review of last interglacial sea-level proxies in the western Atlantic and southwestern Caribbean, from Brazil to Honduras

We use a standardized template for Pleistocene sea-level data to review last interglacial (Marine Isotope Stage 5 - MIS 5) sea-level indicators along the coasts of the western Atlantic and southwestern Caribbean, on a transect spanning from Brazil to Honduras and including the islands of Aruba, Bona...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth system science data 2021-10, Vol.13 (10), p.4819-4845
Hauptverfasser: Rubio-Sandoval, Karla, Rovere, Alessio, Cerrone, Ciro, Stocchi, Paolo, Lorscheid, Thomas, Felis, Thomas, Petersen, Ann-Kathrin, Ryan, Deirdre D.
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container_issue 10
container_start_page 4819
container_title Earth system science data
container_volume 13
creator Rubio-Sandoval, Karla
Rovere, Alessio
Cerrone, Ciro
Stocchi, Paolo
Lorscheid, Thomas
Felis, Thomas
Petersen, Ann-Kathrin
Ryan, Deirdre D.
description We use a standardized template for Pleistocene sea-level data to review last interglacial (Marine Isotope Stage 5 - MIS 5) sea-level indicators along the coasts of the western Atlantic and southwestern Caribbean, on a transect spanning from Brazil to Honduras and including the islands of Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao. We identified six main types of sea-level indicators (beach deposits, coral reef terraces, lagoonal deposits, marine terraces, Ophiomorpha burrows, and tidal notches) and produced 55 standardized data points, each constrained by one or more geochronological methods. Sea-level indicators are well preserved along the Brazilian coasts, providing an almost continuous north-to-south transect. However, this continuity disappears north of the Rio Grande do Norte Brazilian state. According to the sea-level index points (discrete past position of relative sea level in space and time) the paleo sea-level values range from similar to 5.6 to 20m above sea level (a.s.l.) in the continental sector and from similar to 2 to 10ma.s.l. in the Caribbean islands. In this paper, we address the uncertainties surrounding these values. From our review, we identify that the coasts of northern Brazil, French Guiana, Suriname, Guyana, and Venezuela would benefit from a renewed study of Pleistocene sea-level indicators, as it was not possible to identify sea-level index points for the last interglacial coastal outcrops of these countries. Future research must also be directed at improving the chronological control at several locations, and several sites would benefit from the re-measurement of sea-level index points using more accurate elevation measurement techniques.
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subjects Burrowing organisms
Burrows
Coasts
Coral reefs
Data points
Fault lines
Geochronology
Geology
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Indicators
Interglacial periods
Islands
Isotopes
Level indicators
Marine invertebrates
Measurement
Measurement techniques
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Notches
Outcrops
Physical Sciences
Pleistocene
Reviews
Science & Technology
Sea level
Sea level measurements
Sediments
Shorelines
Spreadsheets
Terraces
Terraces (Geology)
Zoobenthos
title A review of last interglacial sea-level proxies in the western Atlantic and southwestern Caribbean, from Brazil to Honduras
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