Surficial sediments and post-glacial relative sea-level history, Hamilton Sound, Newfoundland

Hamilton Sound is a shallow, wave-exposed embayment on the northeast coast of Newfoundland. Four seismostratigraphic units are recognised: (1) bedrock (acoustic basement); (2) a unit with incoherent reflections, interpreted as Late Wisconsinan glacial diamicton or till, which in places forms small d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Atlantic Geology
Main Authors: Shaw, J., Edwardson, K. A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Atlantic Geoscience Society 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/ag/article/view/2123
Description
Summary:Hamilton Sound is a shallow, wave-exposed embayment on the northeast coast of Newfoundland. Four seismostratigraphic units are recognised: (1) bedrock (acoustic basement); (2) a unit with incoherent reflections, interpreted as Late Wisconsinan glacial diamicton or till, which in places forms small drumlins; (3) a thin, acoustically stratified, draped unit found in the deepest parts of the eastern sound, interpreted as glacimarine gravelly mud; and (4) an uppermost unit with an acoustically stratified, ponded facies, and a fades which can be acoustically incoherent. Unit 4 consists of sandy mud, muddy sand, sand and gravel, and results from reworking of units 2 and 3. Three types of seabed occur (1) bedrock; (2) bouldery gravel or gravel, sub-angular to rounded, which overlies, and is derived from, glacial diamicton of acoustic unit 2. The coralline alga Lilholhamnion sp. coats some clasts on their upper surfaces and some clasts completely. This, together with the occurrence of gravel ripples in several areas, is evidence of intermittent sediment mobility, and (3) gravelly sand, sand, muddy sand, or sandy mud, located in basins. Seabed features in this zone include dunes, iceberg furrows and pits. The regional relative sea-level curve is constrained by two types of morphological evidence: rounded drumlin crests at depths below 19 m which would have been truncated if sea level had fallen below -18.S m, and (wave-cut) terraces at depths of 17 to 21 m. These data are indicative of a -17 m lowstand of relative sea level. Radiocarbon dates from a vibracore suggest that the lowstand occurred prior to 8.6 ka B.P. During the lowstand Fogo Island was connected to the mainland by a narrow isthmus. RÉSUMÉ Le défroit d'Hamilton est une bale peu profonde et exposée aux vagues sur la côte nord de Terre-Neuve. Quatre unités sismostratigraphiques sont distinguées : (1) la roche de fond (le socle acoustique); (2) une unité montrant des réflections ...