Last glacial climate change correlated with sea-level changes recorded in the coral terraces
Abstract
Huon Peninsula, Papua New Guinea, is a tectonically unstable, uplifting shoreline ringed by emergent coral terraces. The terraces were formed during episodes of rapid sea-level rise when corals constructed large, discrete platforms that were subsequently uplifted. Uranium series ages of four prominent Huon Peninsula last glacial (OIS 3) coral terraces coincide with the timing of major North Atlantic climate reversals at intervals of 6000 to 7000 years between 30,000 years and 60,000 years ago. Terrace elevations, when combined with uplift, indicate 10 to 15 m high sea-level excursions at these times. We attribute the growth of the terraces directly to sea-level rises arising from discharge of continental or shelf-grounded based ice from major North Atlantic ice-sheets and the Antarctic ice-sheet that precipitated extremes of cold climate called Heinrich events. These periods are associated with major discharges of land-based ice and enhanced concentrations of ice-rafted debris in deep-sea cores. Sea-levels at this time were 60 m to 90 m lower than present.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2002
- Bibcode:
- 2002AGUFMPP11B0310Y
- Keywords:
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- 1223 Ocean/Earth/atmosphere interactions (3339);
- 1620 Climate dynamics (3309);
- 1635 Oceans (4203);
- 3344 Paleoclimatology;
- 4267 Paleoceanography