Late Cenozoic sea level and the rise of modern rimmed atolls
Late Cenozoic sea level and the rise of modern rimmed atolls
Date
2016-03-23
Authors
Toomey, Michael R.
Ashton, Andrew D.
Raymo, Maureen E.
Perron, J. Taylor
Ashton, Andrew D.
Raymo, Maureen E.
Perron, J. Taylor
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DOI
10.1016/j.palaeo.2016.03.018
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Keywords
Reef
Coral
Dissolution
Late Miocene
Oxygen isotope stack
Coral
Dissolution
Late Miocene
Oxygen isotope stack
Abstract
Sea-level records from atolls, potentially spanning the Cenozoic, have been largely overlooked, in part because the processes that control atoll form (reef accretion, carbonate dissolution, sediment transport, vertical motion) are complex and, for many islands, unconstrained on million-year timescales. Here we combine existing observations of atoll morphology and corelog stratigraphy from Enewetak Atoll with a numerical model to (1) constrain the relative rates of subsidence, dissolution and sedimentation that have shaped modern Pacific atolls and (2) construct a record of sea level over the past 8.5 million years. Both the stratigraphy from Enewetak Atoll (constrained by a subsidence rate of ~ 20 m/Myr) and our numerical modeling results suggest that low sea levels (50–125 m below present), and presumably bi-polar glaciations, occurred throughout much of the late Miocene, preceding the warmer climate of the Pliocene, when sea level was higher than present. Carbonate dissolution through the subsequent sea-level fall that accompanied the onset of large glacial cycles in the late Pliocene, along with rapid highstand constructional reef growth, likely drove development of the rimmed atoll morphology we see today.
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This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 451 (2016): 73-83, doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2016.03.018.
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Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 451 (2016): 73-83