4.6 Article

Sedimentary signatures of the abrupt deglacial rise in sea level from the East China Sea inner shelf

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 258, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2021.107423

Keywords

Sea-level signatures; Deglacial meltwater pulses; Abrupt cooling event; East China Sea inner shelf

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB42000000]
  2. National Special Project for Global Change and Air-Sea Interaction [GASI-GEOGE-04]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42076051, 41830539, 41876041]

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This study investigates the sedimentary sequence of the inner shelf of the East China Sea, revealing multiple abrupt rises in deglacial sea level. The results suggest significant environmental changes on the inner shelf during sea-level rise, and the information about sea-level rise is also connected to the weakening of the Asian monsoon.
Understanding the link between deglacial sea-level jumps and abrupt climate change may provide crucial insights into future ice-climate feedbacks. However, much ambiguity remains surrounding many of the last deglacial meltwater pulses. Here, we present a complete sedimentary succession from the inner shelf of the East China Sea, which has clearly documented multiple abrupt rises in the deglacial sea level. The results suggest that the postglacial sedimentary sequence, resting on a late Pleistocene basement of stiff clay, formed during a threestage process marked by characteristic lithology and foraminiferal fauna. The abrupt shifts in the sedimentary facies indicate that seawater firstly intruded into the inner shelf just before the onset of the slowdown in sea-level rise caused by the Younger Dryas cooling event and changed the inner shelf into a tidal flat environment, as demonstrated by the sudden appearance of both planktonic foraminifera and typical brackish-water species of benthic foraminifera. Meltwater pulse 1B (MWP-1B) is depicted by a sharp upward transition to a nearshore subtidal environment at 11.62 kyr. This episode of sea-level rise induced the initial flooding of the inner shelf, which is well documented by the sudden reduction in brackish-water foraminifera species and evident increase in inner-shelf benthic species. The prominent sea-level rise at approximately 7.54 kyr was responsible for the shift to stable inner shelf conditions and resulted in the maximum flooding of the inner shelf area, initiating subsequent formation of the alongshore mud wedge. Additionally, obvious peaks in both the benthic foraminifer abundance and the marine algae concentration at approximately 8.13 kyr confirm the previously identified sealevel jump at approximately 8.2 kyr, which coincides with the weakening of the Asian monsoon demonstrated by the peak grain size in our record, further indicating its apparent connection to the 8.2 kyr climatic reversal.

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