4.3 Article

Late-Holocene sand invasion and North Atlantic storminess along the Aquitaine coast, southwest France

Journal

HOLOCENE
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 231-238

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1191/0959683602hl539rr

Keywords

luminescence; infra-red stimulated luminescence; sand dunes; North Atlantic; storms; 'Little Ice Age'; 'Mediaeval Warm Period'; historical records; late Holocene; Aquitaine; France

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Holocene forested coastal dunes of different morphology fringe the Atlantic coast of south-west Aquitaine. Infra-red stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating has been applied to sands from these dunes in the Aquitaine region in order to test the validity of wdune-classification theories. The ages obtained from the dunes show three phases of sand invasion and dune development during the late Holocene: 3000-4000 years ago; 900-1300 years ago: and 250-550 years ago. The timing of the most recent phase of sand mobilization. as dated by IRSL, is supported h historical maps and records front the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries AD, showing problems for human settlement in the region and village abandonment due to dune drift. Sand invasion is driven h an increase in frequency of severe storms in the North Atlantic associated kith the cooler periods, of the 'Little Ice Age' and early 'Mediaeval Warm Period'. The dunes emplaced 900-1300 years ago were naturally fixed by a mixed deciduous and maritime pine forest during the latter part of the 'Mediaeval Warm Period.

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