4.0 Article

Holocene palaeogeographies of the central Acheloos River delta (NW Greece) in the vicinity of the ancient seaport Oiniadai

Journal

GEODINAMICA ACTA
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 241-256

Publisher

LAVOISIER
DOI: 10.3166/ga.20.241-256

Keywords

acheloos; Oiniadai; palaeogeography; coastal changes; Holocene sea level rise

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The shipsheds of the ancient seaport Oiniadai (5(th)-3(rd) cent. BC), today located in the central Acheloos River delta on top of the Trikardo hills 9 km inland, document considerable coastal changes. This paper deals with the reconstruction of coastal palaeogeographies in that area since the mid-Holocene. Sediments encountered in 51 vibracores were used to detect the distribution pattern of facies. Facies discrimination was based on sedimentological and micro- and macrofaunal analyses. Palaeobotanical, micromorphological and geophysical studies were accomplished to rebuild palaeoenvironmental settings. A geochronology was set up by means of 50 C-14-AMS-dates which also helped to establish a relative sea level curve. At 6000 cal BC, delta progradation started from the north and, by 4500 cal BC, closed off a large lagoon north of Trikardo. At 5400-3100 cal BC, a southern delta arm approached and, by 1350-1000 cal BC, surrounded Trikardo by two distributaries. At 600-200 cal BC, a river channel flowed into the Lagoon of Oiniadai. Thereafter, at 200 cal BC, the delta front switched to the southeast. Delta progradation in today's direction started during Byzantine times. Essential gcoarchaeological results are that (i) an Early Helladic harbour, unknown until now, existed southeast of Trikardo on a lagoonal shore and that (ii) Oiniadai's shipsheds were, in Classical-Hellenistic times, accessible from the sea via a lagoon. (C) 2007 Lavoisier SAS. All rights reserved.

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