Coastal response to climate change: Mediterranean shorelines during the Last Interglacial (MIS 5)

The response of shorelines to climate change is controlled by fall and rise of the sea level and by the alteration of the coastal environment due to changing fluvial discharge and biological activity. In the Mediterranean this response is complicated by the geographic proximity of the North Atlantic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quaternary Science Reviews
Main Authors: Mauz B., Fanelli F., Elmejdoub N., BARBIERI, ROBERTO
Other Authors: Barbieri R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11585/115626
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.02.021
Description
Summary:The response of shorelines to climate change is controlled by fall and rise of the sea level and by the alteration of the coastal environment due to changing fluvial discharge and biological activity. In the Mediterranean this response is complicated by the geographic proximity of the North Atlantic and the African Monsoon climate systems, by a time and space specific interaction of eustatic and water-load components of sea level and by the mid-latitudinal time lag between orbital forcing and terrestrial response. Here, six Mediterranean coastal records are presented which contribute to our understanding of how mid-latitudinal coasts respond to orbital forcing. The sediment sequences show sharp switches between siliciclastic- and carbonate-dominated nearshore environments where carbonate-rich sediments are composed of oolitic grainstones. From modern analogues it is deduced that the oolitic sediments represent a period of relatively high annual sea-surface temperature and lack of fluvial discharge. The warm-arid period was recorded at w114 ka on the southeast Iberian coast, at w113 ka on the Levant coast, at w110 ka on the coast west of the Nile delta and at w83 ka on the north Saharan coast. It lasted 10e20 ka in east (Levant coast) and west (Iberian coast) and lasted 40 ka or more in the central-south of the east Mediterranean. Timing and duration of the coastal proxy allow inferring instantaneous and dominant response to external forcing in the east and west and delayed and prolonged response due to dominant regional forcing in the centre of the East Mediterranean. A 9 m eustatic sea-level highstand during MIS 5e is suggested with a start of the subsequent sea-level fall at w118 ka while evidence for multiple MIS 5e highstand and a highstand during MIS 5a remain elusive.