4.5 Article

Reconstructing Common Era relative sea-level change on the Gulf Coast of Florida

Journal

MARINE GEOLOGY
Volume 390, Issue -, Pages 254-269

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.margeo.2017.07.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [OCE-1458903, OCE-1458921]
  2. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service State Wildlife Grant [F13AF00982]
  3. Earthwatch Institute IGNITE grant
  4. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch Funding
  5. Rhode Island Agricultural Experimental Station [5455]
  6. Teaching and Research Assistantships from the College of the Environment and Life Sciences at the University of Rhode Island
  7. USGS Climate and Land Use R D program
  8. IGCP Project [639]
  9. INQUA project [CMP1701P]
  10. Directorate For Geosciences
  11. Division Of Ocean Sciences [GRANTS:14039531, 1458921, 1458904] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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To address a paucity of Common Era data in the Gulf of Mexico, we reconstructed 1.1 m of relative sea-level (RSL) rise over the past similar to 2000 years at Little Manatee River (Gulf Coast of Florida, USA). We applied a regional scale foraminiferal transfer function to fossil assemblages preserved in a core of salt-marsh peat and organic silt that was dated using radiocarbon and recognition of pollution, Cs-137 and pollen chronohorizons. Our proxy reconstruction was combined with tide-gauge data from four nearby sites spanning 1913-2014 CE. Application of an Errors-in-Variables Integrated Gaussian Process (EIV-IGP) model to the combined proxy and instrumental dataset demonstrates that RSL fell from similar to 350 to 100 BCE, before rising continuously to present. This initial RSL fall was likely the result of local-scale processes (e.g., silting up of a tidal flat or shallow sub-tidal shoal) as salt marsh development at the site began. Since similar to 0 CE, we consider the reconstruction to be representative of regional-scale RSL trends. We removed a linear rate of 0.3 mm/yr from the RSL record using the EIV-IGP model to estimate climate-driven sea-level trends and to facilitate comparison among sites. This analysis demonstrates that since similar to 0 CE sea level did not deviate significantly from zero until accelerating continuously from similar to 1500 CE to present. Sea level was rising at 1.33 mm/yr in 1900 CE and accelerated until 2014 CE when a rate of 2.02 mm/yr was attained, which is the fastest, century-scale trend in the similar to 2000-year record. Comparison to existing reconstructions from the Gulf coast of Louisiana and the Atlantic coast of northern Florida revealsimilar sea-level histories at all three sites. We explored the influence of compaction and fluvial processes on our reconstruction and concluded that compaction was likely insignificant. Fluvial processes were also likely insignificant, but further proxy evidence is needed to fully test this hypothesis. Our results indicate that no significant Common Era sea-level changes took place on the Gulf and southeastern Atlantic U.S. coasts until the onset of modern sea-level rise in the late 19th century.

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