Y. Yokoyama et al., Sea-level at the Last Glacial Maximum: evidence from northwestern Australia to constrain ice volumes for oxygen isotope stage 2, PALAEOGEO P, 165(3-4), 2001, pp. 281-297
New sea-level information from the Bonaparte Gulf in northwestern Australia
is used to constrain the magnitude and rates of change of ice volumes duri
ng the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The region is tectonically stable and fa
r from the former ice-covered regions. The glacio-hydro-isostatic adjustmen
t of the coast is therefore relatively small, and the corrections for this
effect are not sensitive to details of the rebound model. Microfossil analy
sis and AMS radiocarbon dating of 11 gravity cores taken across the shelf a
nd Bonaparte Gulf demonstrate that: (1) the LGM sea-levels were locally at
-125+/-4 m; (2) the LGM terminated abruptly at 19000 cal yr BP with a rapid
rise in sea-level of about 15 m over the next 500 years; and (3) the onset
of the minimum sea-levels occurred before 22000 cal yr BP. When corrected
for the glacio-hydro-isostatic effects, the increase of LGM ice volumes ove
r the present-day ice volume is 52.5 x 10(6)km(3). The termination of the L
GM is marked by a rapid ice discharge of 5.2 x 10(6) km(3). (C) 2001 Elsevi
er Science B.V. All rights reserved.