4.3 Article

Holocene palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Ebro Delta (Western Mediterranean Sea): Evidence for an early construction based on the benthic foraminiferal record

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 1438-1456

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0959683616640048

Keywords

benthic foraminifera; Ebro Delta; environmental evolution; Holocene; Mediterranean Sea; sedimentary sequences

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [EAR-0952146]
  2. Formation and Research Unit in Quaternary: Environmental Changes and Human Fingerprint (UPV/EHU) [UFI11/09]
  3. HAREA-Coastal Geology Research Group (Basque Government) [IT767-13]
  4. IRTA-URV-Santander fellowship through 'BRDI Trainee Research Personnel Programme - University of Rovira and Virgili R + D + I projects'
  5. European Community [FP7-ENV-2013-two-stage-603396]
  6. US National Science Foundation [EAR-0952146]
  7. Formation and Research Unit in Quaternary: Environmental Changes and Human Fingerprint (UPV/EHU) [UFI11/09]
  8. HAREA-Coastal Geology Research Group (Basque Government) [IT767-13]
  9. IRTA-URV-Santander fellowship through 'BRDI Trainee Research Personnel Programme - University of Rovira and Virgili R + D + I projects'
  10. European Community [FP7-ENV-2013-two-stage-603396]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Major Mediterranean deltas began to develop during a period between 8000 and 6000 yr BP when the rate of fluvial sediment input overtook the declining rate of sea-level rise. However, different authors have argued that the Ebro Delta primarily formed during the late Middle Ages as a consequence of increased anthropogenic pressure on its river basin and these arguments are supported by the scarcity of previous geological studies and available radiocarbon dates. To reconstruct the environmental evolution of the Ebro Delta during the Holocene, we used micropalaeontological analysis of continuous boreholes drilled in two different locations (Carlet and Sant Jaume) on the central delta plain. Different lithofacies distributions and associated environments of deposition were defined based on diagnostic foraminiferal assemblages and the application of a palaeowater-depth transfer function. The more landward Carlet sequence shows an older and more proximal progradational delta with a sedimentary record composed of inner bay, lagoonal and beach materials deposited between 7600 and >2000 yr BP under rising sea-level and highstand conditions. This phase was followed by a series of delta plain environments reflected in part by the Carlet deposits that formed before 2000 yr BP. The Sant Jaume borehole is located closer to the present coastline and contains a much younger sequence that accumulated in the last 2.0 ka during the development of three different deltaic lobes under highstand sea-level conditions. The results of this study reinforce the idea that the Ebro Delta dates to the early Holocene, similar to other large Mediterranean deltas.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available