Sea-level change along the French Mediterranean coast for the past 30 000 years

Citation
K. Lambeck et E. Bard, Sea-level change along the French Mediterranean coast for the past 30 000 years, EARTH PLAN, 175(3-4), 2000, pp. 203-222
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
ISSN journal
0012821X → ACNP
Volume
175
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
2000
Pages
203 - 222
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-821X(20000215)175:3-4<203:SCATFM>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Observational evidence for sea-level change along the French Mediterranean coast has been examined and compared with glacio-hydro-isostatic models to predict the spatial and temporal patterns of change for about the past 30 0 00 C-14 years. These predictions are pertinent to discussions of changing o cean volumes during this interval, the tectonic stability or otherwise of t he coastal areas, mantle rheology, and the timing of possible human occupat ion of the now submerged coastal plain and caves, such as Cosquer Cave near Marseille. The principal results from the analysis are: (i) sea levels alo ng this section of the coast have risen continually since the time of the l ast glacial maximum (LGM) and at no time during the Holocene has the mean s ea level been higher than that of today. (ii) The coast has been tectonical ly stable between Marseille and Nice as well as further to the west in Rous sillon. Western Corsica may have experienced a slow tectonic uplift of betw een 0.15-0.3 mm/year for the past 3000 years but northernmost Corsica appea rs to have been stable during this same interval. (iii) During the LGM, sea levels along the coast and immediate off-shore areas stood at between 105- 115 m below present level, the range reflecting the importance of the isost atic contributions. During oxygen isotope stage 3, sea levels do not appear to have risen locally above about -60 m. (iv) The rebound parameters (desc ribing the mantle rheology and ice sheets) required to match the limited ob servational evidence are consistent with the results of similar analyses ca rried out for other parts of Europe. Because of its distance from the forme r northern ice sheets, the isostatic factors are particularly sensitive to the value of the lower-mantle viscosity. (v) The model predictions for sea- level change at the Cosquer Cave site and for its immediate environments in dicate that the cave was last readily accessible before about 10 700 +/- 50 0 C-14 years (about 12 500 +/- 500 cal, years) BP and that the cave entranc e was completely flooded by 9000 +/- 200 radiocarbon years BP (between abou t 9800 and 10 300 calibrated years BP), The cave was above sea level throug hout the oxygen isotope stage 3. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.