Wr. Gehrels, Middle and late holocene sea-level changes in Eastern Maine reconstructed from foraminiferal saltmarsh stratigraphy and AMS C-14 dates on basal peat, QUATERN RES, 52(3), 1999, pp. 350-359
A relative sea-level history is reconstructed for Machiasport, Maine, spann
ing the past 6000 calendar years and combining two different methods. The f
irst method establishes the long-term (10(3) yr) trend of sea-level rise by
dating the base of the Holocene saltmarsh peat overlying a Pleistocene sub
strate. The second method uses detailed analyses of the foraminiferal strat
igraphy of two saltmarsh peat cores to quantify fluctuations superimposed o
n the long-term trend. The indicative meaning of the peat (the height at wh
ich the peat was deposited relative to mean tide level) is calculated by a
transfer function based on vertical distributions of modern foraminiferal a
ssemblages. The chronology is determined from AMS C-14 dates on saltmarsh p
lant fragments embedded in the peat. The combination of the two different a
pproaches produces a high-resolution, replicable sea-level record, which ta
kes into account the autocompaction of the peat sequence. Longterm mean rat
es of sea-level rise, corrected for changes in tidal range, are 0.75 mm/yr
between 6000 and 1500 cal yr B.P. and 0.43 mm/yr during the past 1500 years
. The foraminiferal stratigraphy reveals several low-amplitude fluctuations
during a relatively stable period between 1100 and 400 cal yr B.P., and a
sea-level rise of 0.5 m during the past 300 years. (C) 1999 University of W
ashington.