Depositional development of an isolated mound and adjacent area in the southern Yellow Sea during the last postglacial sea-level rise SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 14 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 16 time in Scopus
Title
Depositional development of an isolated mound and adjacent area in the southern Yellow Sea during the last postglacial sea-level rise
Author(s)
Lee, S. H.; Shinn, Y. J.; Lee, K. E.; Yoo, H. S.
KIOST Author(s)
Lee, Sang Hoon(이상훈)
Alternative Author(s)
이상훈; 유해수
Publication Year
2009-09-01
Abstract
A detailed analysis of the Chirp (2-7 kHz) profiles, core sediments and C-14 ages from an isolated mound and adjacent area in the southern Yellow Sea off the Jiangsu coastal area reveals a highly complex development of transgressive and highstand deposits during the last postglacial sea-level rise. In water depths of 50-60 m, the terrace consists of thin transgressive sediments directly above transgressive surface. The isolated mound (40.7 km long and 29.6 km wide) occurs above 40-50 m in water depth, and is detached from the Jiangsu and East China Sea tidal sand ridges. It comprises the SSE-ward prograding sandy unit (PU) and the overlying muddy flank unit (FU) at the outer margin. The terrace with thin transgressive sediments was most likely formed when sea level rose rapidly from -58 to -45 m around about 11.6 ka. As rate of sea-level rise was attenuated from -45 to -36 m between ca. 11.6 and 9.6 ka, the nearly flat lower boundary of the PU was produced at water depths of 37-42 m by a ravinement process. Subsequent rapid sea-level rise from -36 to -16 m between ca. 9.6 and 9.1 ka created accommodation for deposition of the PU. Sea-level rise stagnated from -16 to -10 m between ca. 9.1 and 7.5 ka during which the Huanghe River apparently shifted south of the Shandong Peninsula and discharged directly into the western Yellow Sea. The combination of slow sea-level rise and sediment supply from the early Holocene Huanghe delta by the southward-flowing coastal currents most likely favoured the formation of the SSE-ward prograding transgressive sandy PU. The highstand muddy FU overlying the PU was accumulated after ca. 7.5 when sea level approached its present position and the Huanghe River shifted back to the north. Development of transgressive and highstand deposits in the study area during the last postglacial sea-level rise was highly variable in time and space in response to changes in rate of sea-level rise together with variations in sediment supply caused by the shifting of the Huanghe River. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
ISSN
0025-3227
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/4250
DOI
10.1016/j.margeo.2009.06.010
Bibliographic Citation
MARINE GEOLOGY, v.265, no.1-2, pp.19 - 30, 2009
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Subject
EAST CHINA SEA; TRANSGRESSIVE DEPOSITS; SEDIMENT ACCUMULATION; SUBAQUEOUS DELTA; SHELF; RIVER; EVOLUTION; RIDGES; TIDE; STRATIGRAPHY
Keywords
transgressive deposits; highstand deposits; sea-level rise; Holocene; Yellow Sea
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.

qrcode

Items in ScienceWatch@KIOST are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse