The Influence of Glacial Isostatic Adjustment on Marine Stratigraphic Correlation

Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) alters the amplitude and timing of ‘glacioeustatic’ sea level maxima and minima around the globe. No study has examined the intrinsic distance that one can correlate marine stratigraphic records of glacial–interglacial sedimentation across continental shelves subje...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: King, Meghan E.
Other Authors: Creveling, Jessica R., Brook, Edward J., Mason, Henry B., Holman, Robert A., College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/v118rm50v
Description
Summary:Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) alters the amplitude and timing of ‘glacioeustatic’ sea level maxima and minima around the globe. No study has examined the intrinsic distance that one can correlate marine stratigraphic records of glacial–interglacial sedimentation across continental shelves subject to varying amounts of GIA. Here, we seek to model how well synthetic (modelled) marine stratigraphies of glacial–interglacial deposition correlate across space and through time. To obtain realistic relative sea-level (RSL) histories arising from GIA, we selected 7 shelf-perpendicular transects along the west coast of North America, extending from Vancouver Island to Baja California, that were variably impacted by post-glacial rebound (northern transects) and peripheral bulge subsidence (southern transects) over the last ~400 kyr. Next, we extracted the lat./long. of 9 sites between 1 and 250 m modern depth along each transect. Finally, we retrieved RSL change for these 63 sites from the output of a gravitationally self-consistent GIA model run from MIS 11 to present (Raymo and Mitrovica, 2012). RSL varies both across individual transects and along the coastline between all 7 transects. For example, a difference in last glacial maximum (LGM) RSL of ~30 m across transect 1 (northernmost transect) arises from a cross-shelf gradient in the gravitational attraction of water to the proximal ice sheet whereas this RSL amplitude difference is only ~1 m across transect 7 (southernmost transect) owing to differential loading of the shelf. A LGM sea level low stand of -53 m at transect 1 and -153 m at transect 2 contributes to a maximum RSL difference of ~100 m along the coastline, and the former low stand occurred over 7 kyr later than the eustatic. The majority of far-field sites exhibit similar timing of RSL change to that of the eustatic, though the glacial amplitude differs by one to tens of meters. The greater similarity in RSL between transect 2–7 versus transect 1 sites arises from the former’s relative distance from ...