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- Title
An indurated Pleistocene coastal barrier on the inner shelf of the Gulf of Valencia (western Mediterranean): evidence for a prolonged relative sea-level stillstand.
- Authors
Alcántara-Carrió, Javier; Albarracín, Silvia; Montoya Montes, Isabel; Flor-Blanco, Germán; Fontán Bouzas, Ángela; Rey Salgado, Jorge
- Abstract
The objective of this study is to document and interpret a recently discovered carbonate-cemented coastal barrier on the inner shelf of the Gulf of Valencia (western Mediterranean Sea). The coastal barrier was identified in a high-resolution digital bathymetric model based on a cartographic survey of the study area using a multibeam echosounder. Moreover, radiocarbon dating and petrographic analyses were performed on a rock sample recovered from the seabed. The data reveal the submerged coastal barrier to be approx. 1.7 km wide and 70 km long, and incised by channels of various dimensions. Aligned more or less parallel to the modern coastline, it is interpreted as corresponding to the shoreline of a former sea-level stillstand. The barrier and lagoon system became stranded above sea level in the course of a subsequent forced regression, which also caused the incision of the river courses. Age dating of the cemented rock suggests that the fossil coastal barrier most probably formed during the prolonged Tyrrhenian (Eemian) sea-level highstand, induration taking place by carbonate cementation at the contact between freshwater and seawater (beach-rock formation). The fact that the fossil barrier is today submerged below modern sea level is explained by the sustained subsidence affecting the region.
- Subjects
GULF of Valencia (Spain); SPAIN; COASTS; PLEISTOCENE Epoch; SEA level; RADIOCARBON dating; PETROLOGY
- Publication
Geo-Marine Letters, 2013, Vol 33, Issue 2/3, p209
- ISSN
0276-0460
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00367-012-0316-9