Environmental evolution of the Basque Coast Geopark estuaries (southern Bay of Biscay) during the last 10,000 years

In order to reconstruct the environmental evolution of the Deba and Urola estuaries located in the Basque Coast Geopark at millennial, centennial and decadal timescales, four long boreholes, three short cores and twelve surface samples were studied. Multiproxy analysis (foraminifera, trace metals an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Marine Systems
Main Authors: Cearreta, A., Irabien, M. J., Gómez Arozamena, J. E., El bani Altuna, N., Goffard, A., García-Artola, A.
Other Authors: Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate, CAGE, AEI, MCIU, UPV, Geoparkea-UPV, Research Council of Norway, UE, MINECO, FEDER
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Journal of Marine Systems 2021
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10810/62205
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2021.103557
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Summary:In order to reconstruct the environmental evolution of the Deba and Urola estuaries located in the Basque Coast Geopark at millennial, centennial and decadal timescales, four long boreholes, three short cores and twelve surface samples were studied. Multiproxy analysis (foraminifera, trace metals and radioisotopes) shows the temporal transformation of these estuaries in response to regional driving forces such as fresh-water discharge, relative sea-level (RSL) variation and the more recent impact of industrial development. At millennial and centennial timescales, the Deba estuary transformed from a tide-dominated to a river-dominated estuary at about 8000 yr cal BP following the decrease in RSL rise rate. This decrease also led to a reduction in both salinity and marine influence in the nearby tide-dominated Urola estuary. At decadal timescale, human disturbance on foraminiferal populations was found to be lower in the Deba estuary despite its higher level of contaminants in sediments. This was due to the greater impact of fresh-water discharge. In the Urola estuary, dredging operations altered severely the foraminiferal biota. © 2021 The Authors This research was supported financially by Geoparkea-UPV/EHU (US13/02), Spanish MINECO (CGL2013-41083-P and RTI2018-095678-B-C21, MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE), UPV/EHU (UFI11/09) and EJ/GV (IT365-10, IT767-13 and IT976-16) projects. NEA is supported by the Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate (CAGE), the Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence scheme (grant 223259 ). These funding sources were not involved in the study design, the collection, analysis and interpretation of data, the writing of the report, or the decision to submit the article for publication.