4.7 Article

Late Pleistocene Boulder Slumps Eroded from a Basalt Shoreline at El Confital Beach on Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, Spain)

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse9020138

Keywords

coastal storm deposits; storm surge; hydrodynamic equations; upper pleistocene; marine isotope substage 5e; North Atlantic Ocean

Funding

  1. Canarian Agency for Research, Innovation, and Society of Information (ACIISI) under the Government of the Canary Islands [ProID2017010159]
  2. FRCT/Acores 2020 from the Regional Fund for Science and Technology (FRCT) [M.3a/F/100/2015]
  3. Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [IF/00465]
  4. FCT [UID/BIA/50027/2013, POCI-01-010145-FEDER-006821]
  5. DRCT1.1 project of the FRCT [a/005/Function-C-/2016]

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This study explores the impact of North Atlantic storms on a Late Pleistocene rocky shoreline formed by basaltic rocks on a volcanic peninsula in Gran Canaria. Results show that wave heights of approximately 4.2 to 4.5 meters eroded the coastline, with larger waves needed to extract the basalt boulders. Fossil marine biota associated with the boulder beds suggest a littoral to very shallow water setting around 125,000 years ago.
This study examines the role of North Atlantic storms degrading a Late Pleistocene rocky shoreline formed by basaltic rocks overlying hyaloclastite rocks on a small volcanic peninsula connected to Gran Canaria in the central region of the Canary Archipelago. A conglomerate dominated by large, ellipsoidal to angular boulders eroded from an adjacent basalt flow was canvassed at six stations distributed along 800 m of the modern shore at El Confital, on the outskirts of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. A total of 166 individual basalt cobbles and boulders were systematically measured in three dimensions, providing the database for analyses of variations in clast shape and size. The goal of this study was to apply mathematical equations elaborated after Nott (2003) and subsequent refinements in order to estimate individual wave heights necessary to lift basalt blocks from the layered and joint-bound sea cliffs at El Confital. On average, wave heights in the order of 4.2 to 4.5 m are calculated as having impacted the Late Pleistocene rocky coastline at El Confital, although the largest boulders in excess of 2 m in diameter would have required larger waves for extraction. A review of the fossil marine biota associated with the boulder beds confirms a littoral to very shallow water setting correlated in time with Marine Isotope Stage 5e (Eemian Stage) approximately 125,000 years ago. The historical record of major storms in the regions of the Canary and Azorean islands indicates that events of hurricane strength were likely to have struck El Confital in earlier times. Due to its high scientific value, the outcrop area featured in this study is included in the Spanish Inventory of Geosites and must be properly protected and managed to ensure conservation against the impact of climate change foreseen in coming years.

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