Reconstructing past sea-level changes from storm-built beach ridges

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Authors

Alessio Rovere , Marta Pappalardo, Sebastian Richiano, Deirdre D. Ryan, Karla Rubio-Sandoval, Patricio Martin Ruiz, Alejandro Montes, Evan James Gowan 

Abstract

Storm-built beach ridges, built by waves on sedimentary coasts, can be used as geomorphological indicators of past sea level. However, quantifying the relationship between the geomorphological elements of the ridge and the paleo sea level at the time of deposition is difficult, as a beach ridge is primarily correlated to wave energy and only secondarily to the position of sea level. In this work, we propose a methodology to quantify the upper and lower limits of a storm-built beach ridge based on remote sensing data. We test our approach on a particularly well-preserved Pleistocene storm-built beach ridge in Patagonia, Argentina. Our results show that the paleo relative sea level reconstructed using remote sensing data coincides (87.6% similarity) with that obtained from measured modern analog landforms at the same location.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X5WT48

Subjects

Earth Sciences, Geology, Geomorphology, Sedimentology

Keywords

Pleistocene sea level · Beach ridges · Patagonia, Argentina · Paleo sea level, Pleistocene sea level, Beach ridges, Patagonia, Argentina, Paleo sea level

Dates

Published: 2024-08-12 08:14

Last Updated: 2024-08-15 10:50

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License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International