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Article: Testing the Utility of Geochemical Proxies to Reconstruct Holocene Coastal Environments and Relative Sea Level: A Case Study from Hungry Bay, Bermuda

TitleTesting the Utility of Geochemical Proxies to Reconstruct Holocene Coastal Environments and Relative Sea Level: A Case Study from Hungry Bay, Bermuda
Authors
KeywordsMangrove
δ13C
Sargassum
Rock-eval pyrolysis
Radiocarbon
Issue Date2019
Citation
Open Quaternary, 2019, v. 5, article no. 1 How to Cite?
Abstract© 2019 The Author(s). On low-lying, tropical and sub-tropical coastlines freshwater marshes may be replaced by salt--tolerant mangroves in response to relative sea-level rise. Pollen analysis of radiocarbon--dated sediment cores showed that such a change occurred in Hungry Bay, Bermuda during the late Holocene. This well-established paleoenvironmental trajectory provides an opportunity to explore if geochemical proxies (bulk-sediment δ13C and Rock-Eval pyrolysis) can reconstruct known environmental changes and relative sea level. We characterized surface sediment from depositional environments in Bermuda (freshwater wetlands, saline mangroves, and wrack composed of Sargassum natans macroalgae) using geochemical measurements and demonstrate that a multi-proxy approach can objectively distinguish among these environments. However, application of these techniques to the transgressive sediment succession beneath Hungry Bay suggests that freshwater peat and mangrove peat cannot be reliably distinguished in the sedimentary record, possibly because of post--depositional convergence of geochemical characteristics on decadal to multi--century timescales and/or the relatively small number of modern samples analyzed. Sediment that includes substantial contributions from Sargassum is readily identified by geochemistry, but has a limited spatial extent. Radiocarbon dating indicates that beginning at -700 CE, episodic marine incursions into Hungry Bay (e.g., during storms) carried Sargassum that accumulated as wrack and thickened through repeated depositional events until ~300 CE. It took a further ~550 years for a peat--forming mangrove community to colonize Hungry Bay, which then accumulated sediment rapidly, but likely out of equilibrium with regional relative sea-level rise.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/273746
ISSN
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 0.611

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorKemp, Andrew C.-
dc.contributor.authorVane, Christopher H.-
dc.contributor.authorKhan, Nicole S.-
dc.contributor.authorEllison, Joanna C.-
dc.contributor.authorEngelhart, Simon E.-
dc.contributor.authorHorton, Benjamin P.-
dc.contributor.authorNikitina, Daria-
dc.contributor.authorSmith, Struan R.-
dc.contributor.authorRodrigues, Lisa J.-
dc.contributor.authorMoyer, Ryan P.-
dc.date.accessioned2019-08-12T09:56:32Z-
dc.date.available2019-08-12T09:56:32Z-
dc.date.issued2019-
dc.identifier.citationOpen Quaternary, 2019, v. 5, article no. 1-
dc.identifier.issn2055-298X-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/273746-
dc.description.abstract© 2019 The Author(s). On low-lying, tropical and sub-tropical coastlines freshwater marshes may be replaced by salt--tolerant mangroves in response to relative sea-level rise. Pollen analysis of radiocarbon--dated sediment cores showed that such a change occurred in Hungry Bay, Bermuda during the late Holocene. This well-established paleoenvironmental trajectory provides an opportunity to explore if geochemical proxies (bulk-sediment δ13C and Rock-Eval pyrolysis) can reconstruct known environmental changes and relative sea level. We characterized surface sediment from depositional environments in Bermuda (freshwater wetlands, saline mangroves, and wrack composed of Sargassum natans macroalgae) using geochemical measurements and demonstrate that a multi-proxy approach can objectively distinguish among these environments. However, application of these techniques to the transgressive sediment succession beneath Hungry Bay suggests that freshwater peat and mangrove peat cannot be reliably distinguished in the sedimentary record, possibly because of post--depositional convergence of geochemical characteristics on decadal to multi--century timescales and/or the relatively small number of modern samples analyzed. Sediment that includes substantial contributions from Sargassum is readily identified by geochemistry, but has a limited spatial extent. Radiocarbon dating indicates that beginning at -700 CE, episodic marine incursions into Hungry Bay (e.g., during storms) carried Sargassum that accumulated as wrack and thickened through repeated depositional events until ~300 CE. It took a further ~550 years for a peat--forming mangrove community to colonize Hungry Bay, which then accumulated sediment rapidly, but likely out of equilibrium with regional relative sea-level rise.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofOpen Quaternary-
dc.rightsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.-
dc.subjectMangrove-
dc.subjectδ13C-
dc.subjectSargassum-
dc.subjectRock-eval pyrolysis-
dc.subjectRadiocarbon-
dc.titleTesting the Utility of Geochemical Proxies to Reconstruct Holocene Coastal Environments and Relative Sea Level: A Case Study from Hungry Bay, Bermuda-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturepublished_or_final_version-
dc.identifier.doi10.5334/oq.49-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85064751403-
dc.identifier.volume5-
dc.identifier.spagearticle no. 1-
dc.identifier.epagearticle no. 1-
dc.identifier.issnl2055-298X-

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