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GSA Bulletin; July 2004; v. 116; no. 7-8; p. 1026-1039; DOI: 10.1130/B2525478.1
© 2004 Geological Society of America
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Deciphering Holocene sea-level history on the U.S. Gulf Coast: A high-resolution record from the Mississippi Delta

Torbjörn E. Törnqvist{dagger},1, Juan L. González{dagger},1, Lee A. Newsom{dagger},2, Klaas van der Borg{dagger},3, Arie F.M. de Jong{dagger},3 and Charles W. Kurnik{dagger},4

1 Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 845 West Taylor Street, Chicago, Illinois 60607-7059, USA
2 Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802-3404, USA
3 Robert J. Van de Graaff Laboratory, Utrecht University, PO Box 80000, NL-3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands
4 University NAVSTAR Consortium (UNAVCO), PO Box 3000, Boulder, Colorado 80307-3000, USA

Published Holocene relative sea-level (RSL) curves for the U.S. Gulf Coast are in mutual conflict, with some characterized by a smooth RSL rise akin to widely accepted eustatic sea-level curves versus others, including several recent ones, that are characterized by a conspicuous "stair-step" pattern with prolonged (millennium-scale) RSL stillstands alternating with rapid (meter-scale) rises. In addition, recent work in Texas and Alabama has revitalized the notion of a middle Holocene RSL highstand, estimated at 2 m above present mean sea level.

An extensive sampling program in the Mississippi Delta (Louisiana) focused on the collection of basal peats that accumulated during the initial transgression of the pre-existing, consolidated Pleistocene basement. We used stable carbon isotope ratios to demonstrate that many of these samples accumulated in environments affected by frequent saltwater intrusion in the <30 cm zone between mean spring high water and mean sea level, and we selected plant macrofossils that were subjected to AMS 14C dating. Nearly 30 sea-level index points from a ~20 km2 study area on the eastern margin of the delta suggest that RSL rise followed a relatively smooth trend for the time interval 8000–3000 cal yr B.P., thus questioning the occurrence of major RSL stillstands alternating with abrupt rises. Given the narrow error envelope defined by our data set, any sea-level fluctuations, if present, would have amplitudes of <1 m.

Although a true middle Holocene highstand never occurred in the Mississippi Delta, the high level of detail of our time series enables a rigorous test of this hypothesis. Correction of our data set for a hypothetical tectonic subsidence rate of 1.1 mm yr–1 (assuming a constant subsidence rate compared to the tectonically relatively stable adjacent coast of Texas) leads to sea levels near 2 m above present during the time interval 6000–4000 cal yr B.P. However, this model also implies a RSL position near –2 m around 8000 cal yr B.P., which is inconsistent both with data of this age from Texas, as well as with widely accepted sea-level data from elsewhere. We therefore conclude that a middle Holocene highstand for the U.S. Gulf Coast is highly unlikely, and that the entire area is still responding glacio-isostatically, by means of forebulge collapse, to the melting of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.

Key Words: sea-level change • Holocene • Mississippi Delta • Gulf Coast • Quaternary geology




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