Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.

Reconstructing past sea levels can help constrain uncertainties surrounding the rate of change, magnitude, and impacts of the projected increase through the 21st century. Of significance is the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in tectonically stable and remote (far-field) locations from maj...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Dougherty, Amy J., Thomas, , Zoë A., Fogwill, Christopher J., Hogg, Alan G., Palmer, Jonathan, Rainsley, Eleanor, Williams, Alan N., Ulm, Sean, Rogers, Kerrylee, Jones, Brian G., Turney, Chris
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Public Library Science 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10289/13823
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430
id ftunivwaikato:oai:researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz:10289/13823
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spelling ftunivwaikato:oai:researchcommons.waikato.ac.nz:10289/13823 2024-01-21T10:00:29+01:00 Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise. Dougherty, Amy J. Thomas, , Zoë A. Fogwill, Christopher J. Hogg, Alan G. Palmer, Jonathan Rainsley, Eleanor Williams, Alan N. Ulm, Sean Rogers, Kerrylee Jones, Brian G. Turney, Chris United States 2019 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10289/13823 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430 en eng Public Library Science PLoS One Dougherty, A. J., Thomas, Zoë A., Fogwill, C., Hogg, A. G., Palmer, J., Rainsley, E., … Turney, C. (2019). Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise. PLoS One, 14(7), e0218430. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430 https://hdl.handle.net/10289/13823 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0218430 1932-6203 © 2019 Dougherty et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Antarctic Regions Australia Carbon Isotopes Fossils History Ancient Ice Cover Sea Level Rise Journal Article 2019 ftunivwaikato https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430 2023-12-26T18:25:43Z Reconstructing past sea levels can help constrain uncertainties surrounding the rate of change, magnitude, and impacts of the projected increase through the 21st century. Of significance is the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in tectonically stable and remote (far-field) locations from major ice sheets. The east coast of Australia provides an excellent arena in which to investigate changes in relative sea level during the Holocene. Considerable debate surrounds both the peak level and timing of the east coast highstand. The southeast Australian site of Bulli Beach provides the earliest evidence for the establishment of a highstand in the Southern Hemisphere, although questions have been raised about the pretreatment and type of material that was radiocarbon dated for the development of the regional sea-level curve. Here we undertake a detailed morpho- and chronostratigraphic study at Bulli Beach to better constrain the timing of the Holocene highstand in eastern Australia. In contrast to wood and charcoal samples that may provide anomalously old ages, probably due to inbuilt age, we find that short-lived terrestrial plant macrofossils provide a robust chronological framework. Bayesian modelling of the ages provide improved dating of the earliest evidence for a highstand at 6,880±50 cal BP, approximately a millennium later than previously reported. Our results from Bulli now closely align with other sea-level reconstructions along the east coast of Australia, and provide evidence for a synchronous relative sea-level highstand that extends from the Gulf of Carpentaria to Tasmania. Our refined age appears to be coincident with major ice mass loss from Northern Hemisphere and Antarctic ice sheets, supporting previous studies that suggest these may have played a role in the relative sea-level highstand. Further work is now needed to investigate the environmental impacts of regional sea levels, and refine the timing of the subsequent sea-level fall in the Holocene and its influence on coastal evolution. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic The University of Waikato: Research Commons Antarctic PLOS ONE 14 7 e0218430
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Waikato: Research Commons
op_collection_id ftunivwaikato
language English
topic Antarctic Regions
Australia
Carbon Isotopes
Fossils
History
Ancient
Ice Cover
Sea Level Rise
spellingShingle Antarctic Regions
Australia
Carbon Isotopes
Fossils
History
Ancient
Ice Cover
Sea Level Rise
Dougherty, Amy J.
Thomas, , Zoë A.
Fogwill, Christopher J.
Hogg, Alan G.
Palmer, Jonathan
Rainsley, Eleanor
Williams, Alan N.
Ulm, Sean
Rogers, Kerrylee
Jones, Brian G.
Turney, Chris
Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
topic_facet Antarctic Regions
Australia
Carbon Isotopes
Fossils
History
Ancient
Ice Cover
Sea Level Rise
description Reconstructing past sea levels can help constrain uncertainties surrounding the rate of change, magnitude, and impacts of the projected increase through the 21st century. Of significance is the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in tectonically stable and remote (far-field) locations from major ice sheets. The east coast of Australia provides an excellent arena in which to investigate changes in relative sea level during the Holocene. Considerable debate surrounds both the peak level and timing of the east coast highstand. The southeast Australian site of Bulli Beach provides the earliest evidence for the establishment of a highstand in the Southern Hemisphere, although questions have been raised about the pretreatment and type of material that was radiocarbon dated for the development of the regional sea-level curve. Here we undertake a detailed morpho- and chronostratigraphic study at Bulli Beach to better constrain the timing of the Holocene highstand in eastern Australia. In contrast to wood and charcoal samples that may provide anomalously old ages, probably due to inbuilt age, we find that short-lived terrestrial plant macrofossils provide a robust chronological framework. Bayesian modelling of the ages provide improved dating of the earliest evidence for a highstand at 6,880±50 cal BP, approximately a millennium later than previously reported. Our results from Bulli now closely align with other sea-level reconstructions along the east coast of Australia, and provide evidence for a synchronous relative sea-level highstand that extends from the Gulf of Carpentaria to Tasmania. Our refined age appears to be coincident with major ice mass loss from Northern Hemisphere and Antarctic ice sheets, supporting previous studies that suggest these may have played a role in the relative sea-level highstand. Further work is now needed to investigate the environmental impacts of regional sea levels, and refine the timing of the subsequent sea-level fall in the Holocene and its influence on coastal evolution.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dougherty, Amy J.
Thomas, , Zoë A.
Fogwill, Christopher J.
Hogg, Alan G.
Palmer, Jonathan
Rainsley, Eleanor
Williams, Alan N.
Ulm, Sean
Rogers, Kerrylee
Jones, Brian G.
Turney, Chris
author_facet Dougherty, Amy J.
Thomas, , Zoë A.
Fogwill, Christopher J.
Hogg, Alan G.
Palmer, Jonathan
Rainsley, Eleanor
Williams, Alan N.
Ulm, Sean
Rogers, Kerrylee
Jones, Brian G.
Turney, Chris
author_sort Dougherty, Amy J.
title Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
title_short Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
title_full Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
title_fullStr Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
title_full_unstemmed Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
title_sort redating the earliest evidence of the mid-holocene relative sea-level highstand in australia and implications for global sea-level rise.
publisher Public Library Science
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10289/13823
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430
op_coverage United States
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation PLoS One
Dougherty, A. J., Thomas, Zoë A., Fogwill, C., Hogg, A. G., Palmer, J., Rainsley, E., … Turney, C. (2019). Redating the earliest evidence of the mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand in Australia and implications for global sea-level rise. PLoS One, 14(7), e0218430. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430
https://hdl.handle.net/10289/13823
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0218430
1932-6203
op_rights © 2019 Dougherty et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218430
container_title PLOS ONE
container_volume 14
container_issue 7
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