220 results on '"Helmut Brückner"'
Search Results
2. Geophysical prospections support the historical identification of the archaeological site at Lake Gala, Hebros/Maritsa/Meriç delta (Turkey)
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Anca Dan, Ercan Erkul, Simon Fischer, Harald Stümpel, Sait Bașaran, Elif Çokaman, Luc Lapierre, Helmut Brückner, and Wolfgang Rabbel
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Archaeological survey and combined geophysical measurements of magnetics were conducted. Geoelectrics and ground penetrating radar support the interpretation of a Roman station controlling a branch of the Via Egnatia leading to Ainos (modern Enez in Turkey). The site could be the first archaeological example of a road station in Thrace, constructed between the 1st and the 2nd century CE.
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- 2023
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3. Insights into Holocene relative sea‐level changes in the southern North Sea using an improved microfauna‐based transfer function
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Peter Frenzel, Achim Wehrmann, Frank Schlütz, Helmut Brückner, Max Engel, Anna Pint, Kristin Haynert, Juliane Scheder, Friederike Bungenstock, Bungenstock, Friederike, 2Lower Saxony Institute for Historical Coastal Research Wilhelmshaven Germany, Haynert, Kristin, 3Marine Research Department Senckenberg am Meer Wilhelmshaven Germany, Pint, Anna, 1 Institute of Geography, University of Cologne Köln Germany, Schlütz, Frank, Frenzel, Peter, 5 Institute of Geosciences, Friedrich Schiller University Jena Jena Germany, Wehrmann, Achim, Brückner, Helmut, Engel, Max, and 6 Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University Heidelberg Germany
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010506 paleontology ,ddc:551.468 ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,biology ,Paleontology ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Foraminifera ,Oceanography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,13. Climate action ,Microfauna ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,14. Life underwater ,North sea ,Sea level ,Geology ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
In light of global warming and rising relative sea level (RSL), detailed reconstructions of RSL histories and their controlling processes are essential in order to manage coastal‐protection challenges. This study contributes to unravelling Holocene RSL change on the East Frisian North Sea coast in high resolution and with a new approach for the German Bight. For the first time, a transfer function (vertical error: 29.7 cm ≙ ~11% of the mean tidal range) for RSL change based on a combined training set of benthic foraminifers and ostracods from the back‐barrier tidal basin of Spiekeroog is applied to the Holocene record of the back‐barrier tidal basin of Norderney. The resulting RSL curve for the Norderney tidal basin is corrected for decompaction and shows a deceleration in RSL rise between 6000 and 5000 cal bp. The smallest possible error envelope (~1 m) results from the good suitability of salt‐marsh layers between 5000 and 4000 cal bp. The RSL curve provides an approach towards the closure of the common data gap of peat‐based curves for the southern North Sea related to a lack of basal peats in the youngest age range, and verifies regional differences in glacial isostatic adjustment., Volkswagen Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001663, Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100010570
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- 2021
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4. Pedogenesis at the coastal arid-hyperarid transition deduced from a Late Quaternary chronosequence at Paposo, Atacama Desert
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Janek Walk, Philipp Schulte, Melanie Bartz, Ariane Binnie, Martin Kehl, Ramona Mörchen, Xiaolei Sun, Georg Stauch, Christopher Tittmann, Roland Bol, Helmut Brückner, and Frank Lehmkuhl
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Earth-Surface Processes - Published
- 2023
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5. Evaluating optically stimulated luminescence rock surface exposure dating as a novel approach for reconstructing coastal boulder movement on decadal to centennial timescales
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Christoph Burow, Helmut Brückner, Benjamin Lehmann, Georgina E. King, Nadia Mhammdi, Simon Matthias May, Anja Zander, Dominik Brill, and Dennis Wolf
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,lcsh:Dynamic and structural geology ,Lithology ,Geochemistry ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Feldspar ,01 natural sciences ,Calcarenite ,Geophysics ,Surface exposure dating ,lcsh:QE500-639.5 ,visual_art ,Clastic rock ,Cliff ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Erosion ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Chronology - Abstract
Wave-transported boulders represent important records of storm and tsunami impact over geological timescales. Their use for hazard assessment requires chronological information on their displacement that in many cases cannot be achieved by established dating approaches. To fill this gap, this study investigated, for the first time, the potential of optically stimulated luminescence rock surface exposure dating (OSL-RSED) for estimating cliff-detachment ages of wave-transported coastal boulders. The approach was tested on calcarenite clasts at the Rabat coast, Morocco. Calibration of the OSL-RSED model was based on samples with rock surfaces exposed to sunlight for ∼ 2 years, and OSL exposure ages were evaluated against age control deduced from satellite images. Our results show that the dating precision is limited for all targeted boulders due to the local source rock lithology which has low amounts of quartz and feldspar. The dating accuracy may be affected by erosion rates on boulder surfaces of 0.02–0.18 mm yr−1. Nevertheless, we propose a robust relative chronology for boulders that are not affected by significant post-depositional erosion and that share surface angles of inclination with the calibration samples. The relative chronology indicates that (i) most boulders were detached from the cliff by storm waves; (ii) these storms lifted boulders with masses of up to ∼ 24 t; and (iii) the role of storms in the formation of boulder deposits along the Rabat coast is more significant than previously assumed. Although OSL-RSED cannot provide reliable absolute exposure ages for the coastal boulders in this study, the approach has large potential for boulder deposits composed of rocks with larger amounts of quartz or feldspar and less susceptibility to erosion.
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- 2021
6. Identifying Land-Use Related Potential Disaster Risk Drivers in the Ayeyarwady Delta (Myanmar) during the Last 50 Years (1974–2021) Using a Hybrid Ensemble Learning Model
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Anissa Vogel, Katharina Seeger, Dominik Brill, Helmut Brückner, null Khin Khin Soe, null Nay Win Oo, null Nilar Aung, null Zin Nwe Myint, and Frauke Kraas
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General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ayeyarwady Delta ,Myanmar ,mega-delta ,land cover classification ,ensemble learning ,Landsat ,Sentinel ,disaster risk drivers - Abstract
Land-use and land-cover change (LULCC) dynamics significantly impact deltas, which are among the world’s most valuable but also vulnerable habitats. Non-risk-oriented LULCCs can act as disaster risk drivers by increasing levels of exposure and vulnerability or by reducing capacity. Making thematically detailed long-term LULCC data available is crucial to improving understanding of those dynamics interlinked at different spatiotemporal scales. For the Ayeyarwady Delta, one of the least studied mega-deltas, such comprehensive information is still lacking. This study used 50 Landsat and Sentinel-1A images spanning five decades from 1974 to 2021 in five-year intervals. A hybrid ensemble model consisting of six machine-learning classifiers was employed to generate land-cover maps from the images, achieving accuracies of about 90%. The major identified potential risk-relevant LULCC dynamics include urban growth towards low-lying areas, mangrove deforestation, and the expansion of irrigated agricultural areas and cultivated aquatic surfaces. The novel area-wide LULCC products achieved through the analyses provide a basis to support future risk-sensitive development decisions and can be used for regionally adapted disaster risk management plans and models. Developed with freely available data and open-source software, they hold great potential to increase research activity in the Ayeyarwady Delta and will be shared upon request.
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- 2022
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7. Testing the potential of K-feldspar pIR-IRSL and quartz ESR for dating coastal alluvial fan complexes in arid environments
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Anja Zander, Georgina E. King, Melanie Bartz, Helmut Brückner, Frank Lehmkuhl, Mathieu Duval, Dominik Brill, Janek Walk, Alexander Rhein, and Georg Stauch
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010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pleistocene ,Alluvial fan ,Geochemistry ,Sediment ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Aeolian processes ,Sedimentary rock ,Alluvium ,Sediment transport ,Quartz ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Coastal alluvial fans (CAF) are important geo-archives due to their sensitivity to both tectonic activity and climatic changes. Thus, they can give key insights for geomorphic and sedimentary processes. In this study we test the potential of K-feldspar post infrared-infrared stimulated luminescence (pIR-IRSL) and quartz electron spin resonance (ESR) methods for dating alluvial fan complexes in arid environments. The existing chronological data from marine terraces that interact with CAF make the Atacama Desert in northern Chile an excellent setting for this research. Samples have been collected from alluvial, marine and aeolian sediments embedded in the CAF complexes, allowing evaluation of the different signal properties and bleaching characteristics of the pIR-IRSL and ESR signals over Late Pleistocene time scales. pIR-IRSL dose distributions of clast-rich alluvial fan samples are characterised by higher scatter and demonstrate heterogeneous bleaching, while matrix-rich alluvial fan deposits show rather homogeneous poor bleaching in the dose dispersion as indicated by a modern analogue sample. In contrast, marine and aeolian deposits are homogeneously well bleached, supported by a modern littoral sample. Following the quartz multiple centre (MC) ESR dating approach (Al and Ti centres), bleaching of the different centres prior to deposition has been achieved. While the Ti–H centre provides mostly lower doses than the Ti–Li centre, in most cases the Al centre provides the highest dose values. This pattern is consistent with their respective bleaching kinetics and suggests that the Ti centre signals most likely provide the closest estimate to the true burial dose for samples with doses >200 Gy. ESR and pIR-IRSL ages are consistent at 2σ for the marine, aeolian and clast-rich debris-flow deposits, which is in agreement with existing chronological data in this area. It appears that the mode of sediment transport on alluvial fans, either as matrix- or clast-rich flows, plays an important role in sediment bleaching. While clast-rich alluvial fan deposits are likely better bleached, we cannot exclude insufficient bleaching during matrix-rich alluvial fan flows; our dating results suggest that both pIR-IRSL and ESR dating overestimate the true burial age. The combination of pIR-IRSL and MC ESR dating can be considered as a promising tool for deciphering alluvial fan formation over (Late) Pleistocene time scales.
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- 2020
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8. Characterization of silty to fine‐sandy sediments with SH waves: full waveform inversion in comparison with other geophysical methods
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Thomas Schmidts, Sait Basaran, Daniel Köhn, Martin Seeliger, Wolfgang Rabbel, Tina Wunderlich, Helmut Brückner, Dennis Wilken, and Michaela Schwardt
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geophysical imaging ,Inversion (geology) ,Geophysics ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Love wave ,Surface wave ,Trench ,ddc:550 ,Reflection (physics) ,Electrical resistivity tomography ,Magnetic anomaly ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
We apply seismic full waveform inversion to SH‐ and Love‐wave data for investigating the near‐surface lithology at an archaeological site. We evaluate the resolution of the applied full waveform inversion algorithm through ground truthing in the form of an excavation and sediment core studies. Thereby, we investigate the benefits of full waveform inversion in comparison with other established methods of near‐surface prospecting in terms of resolution capabilities and interpretation security. The study is performed in a presumed harbour area of the ancient Thracian city of Ainos. The exemplary target is the source of a linear magnetic anomaly oriented perpendicular to the coast, which was found in a previous magnetic gradiometry survey, suggesting a mole. The SH‐wave full waveform inversion recovered a subsurface SH‐wave velocity model with submeter resolution showing lateral and vertical velocity variation between 40 and 150 m/s. To tame the non‐linearity of the full waveform inversion, a sequential inversion of frequency bands has to be combined with time‐windowing in order to separate the Love wave from the reflected SH wavefield. We compare the full waveform inversion results with multichannel analysis of surface waves, standard seismic reflection imaging, electrical resistivity tomography and electromagnetic induction. It turns out that the respective depth sections are correlated to a certain degree with the full waveform inversion results. However, the structural resolution of the other geophysical methods is significantly lower than for the full waveform inversion. An exception is the reflection seismic imaging, which shows the same resolution as full waveform inversion but can only be interpreted together with the full waveform inversion–based velocity model. An archaeological excavation as well as coring data allows ground truthing and a direct understanding of the geophysical structures. The results show that the target was a sort of near‐surface trench of about 3–4 m width and 0.8 m to 1.0 m depth, filled with silty sediment, which differs from the layered surrounding in colour and composition. The ground truthing revealed that only SH‐wave full waveform inversion and seismic reflection imaging could image the trench and sediment structure with satisfying lateral and depth resolution. We emphasize that the velocity distribution from SH‐wave full waveform inversion agrees closely with the excavated subsurface structures, and that the discovered changes in seismic velocity correlate with changes in the sand content in the respective sediment facies sequences. The study demonstrated that SH‐wave full waveform inversion is capable to image structural and lithological changes in the near subsurface at scales as low as 0.5 m, thus providing the high resolution needed for archaeological and geoarchaeological prospection.
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- 2020
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9. Digital mapping of coastal boulders – high‐resolution data acquisition to infer past and recent transport dynamics
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R. C. Eco, Max Engel, JaN B. Galang, Eva Quix, Francesca Llanes, Lia Anne Gonzalo, Fabian Boesl, and Helmut Brückner
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010506 paleontology ,Coastal hazards ,Digital mapping ,Orientation (computer vision) ,Stratigraphy ,Geology ,Coastal geography ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Typhoon ,Satellite imagery ,Coastal flood ,Sediment transport ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Remote sensing - Abstract
Coastal boulder fields provide clues to long-term frequency-magnitude patterns of coastal flooding events and have the potential to play an important role in coastal hazard assessment. Mapping boulders in the field is time and labour-intensive, and work on intertidal reef platforms, as in the present study, is physically challenging. By addressing coastal scientists who are not specialists in remote sensing, this contribution reports on the possibilities and limitations of digital applications in boulder mapping in Eastern Samar, Philippines, where recent supertyphoons Haiyan and Hagupit induced high waves, coastal flooding and boulder transport. It is demonstrated how satellite imagery of sub-metre resolution (from Pleiades and WorldView-3 imagery) enables efficient analysis of transport vectors and distances of larger boulders, reflecting variation in latitudes of both typhoon tracks and approaching angles of typhoon-generated waves. During the investigated events, boulders with a-axes of up to 8 m were clearly identified to have been shifted for up to 32 m, mostly along the seaward margin of the boulder field. It is, however, hard to keep track of smaller boulders, and the length of a-axes and b-axes including their orientation is often impossible to map with sufficient accuracy. Orthophotographs and digital surface models created through the application of an unmanned aerial vehicle and the 'Structure from Motion' technique provide ultra-high-resolution data, and have the potential to not only improve the results of satellite image analysis, but also those from field mapping and may significantly reduce overall time in the field. Orthophotographs permit unequivocal mapping of a-axes and b-axes including their orientation, while precise values for c-axes can be derived from the respective digital surface models. Volume of boulders is best inferred from boulder-specific Structure from Motion-based three-dimensional models. Battery power, flight speed and altitude determine the limits of the area covered, while patches shielded by the boulders are difficult to resolve. For some tasks, field mapping remains mandatory and cannot be replaced by currently available remote sensing tools: for example, sampling for rock type, density and age dating, recording of lithological separation of boulders from the underlying geological unit and of geomorphic features on a millimetre to decimetre-scale, or documentation of fine-grained sediment transport in between the boulders in supratidal settings. In terms of future events, the digital products presented here will provide a valuable reference to track boulder transport on a centimetre to decimetre-scale and to better understand the hydrodynamics of extreme-wave events on a fringing reef coastline.
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- 2020
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10. Modern and historical tropical cyclone and tsunami deposits at the coast of Myanmar: Implications for their identification and preservation in the geological record
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Dominik Brill, Felix Reize, Nilar Aye, Win Thuzar Nyunt, Anna Pint, Helmut Brückner, Stephan Opitz, Frauke Kraas, Martin Seeliger, Kyaw Kyaw, Kay Thwe Hlaing, Katharina Seeger, Khin Mi Mi Win, and Aung Aung
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Thermoluminescence dating ,Stratigraphy ,Earth science ,Geology ,Identification (biology) ,Hazard analysis ,Tropical cyclone ,Geologic record - Published
- 2020
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11. Late Pleistocene and Holocene landscape evolution at Lake Paravani (Lesser Caucasus, Georgia)
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Daniel Gademann, Nino Ustiashvili, Levan Navrotishvili, Koff Tiiu, Mikheil Elashvili, Helmut Brückner, and Hannes Laermanns
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Lake Paravani is located in the Republic of Georgia at an altitude of 2073 m on the volcanic Javakheti Plateau (Lesser Caucasus). Although first studies were conducted at the lake the last years, many questions remain unsolved regarding to the sedimentation pattern and the landscape evolution in general. Hence, we aim to deepen the understanding of landscape genesis during the Holocene and beyond. Therefore, a coring transect of eight cores was taken in the southern part of the lake and two of these sediment cores, ICE001 and ICE006, were analysed with respect to (i) landscape, vegetation and climate evolution since the Pleistocene, and (ii) their processes. By using an applied multi-proxy approach, sediment properties in terms of granulometry, geochemical composition, magnetic susceptibility, organic content, and palynology were analysed.The results suggest high lake levels for the period from about 28 to 16 ka BP, inferring a cold and humid climate in the Lake Paravani basin. The landscape was covered by glaciers, which act as drivers for the prevailing physical weathering while sparse vegetation and poorly developed soils dominated around Lake Paravani. Since 16 ka BP, a declining lake level is identified, from which a significant increase in aridity is inferred while temperatures remain constantly low. The accompanying shift of facies into the sublittoral establishes variable depositional conditions at the site of borehole ICE001. For this reason, the transition from glacial to interglacial is poorly recorded. Early and middle Holocene deposits were eventually eroded during lake level fluctuations. A palaeobeach facies at approximately 4.5 ka BP displays low lake level and indicates high aridity. The period from 4.5 ka BP to present was characterized by rising lake level to recent conditions. Furthermore, increasing productivity within the lake, as shown by the total organic content, indicates warmer temperatures, and consequently increasing intensity of chemical weathering. In addition, vegetation cover established and soils developed.
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- 2022
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12. Investigating a small-scale archaeological feature in the ancient city of Miletus using shear wave seismics
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Simon Levin Fischer, Ercan Erkul, Manuel Zolchow, Ismail Kaplanvural, Helmut Brückner, Christof Berns, and Wolfgang Rabbel
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The ancient city Miletus is located at the Mediterranean coast of present Turkey. Its former geographical position on a land tongue in the Gulf of Miletus with four bays, which can be used as harbours, made the city a place of great economical interest. During the last decades, several archaeological and geophysical investigations were carried out to reconstruct the cityscape of Miletus.In 2018, geoelectrical measurements revealed a high-resistive anomaly near the ancient western market place. The aim of the presented study is a more detailed imaging of this anomaly with help of shear wave seismic methods. For this purpose, a 35.5m long profile was build up across the geoelectric anomaly. An overall of 72 S-geophones was used with a spacing of 0.5m. Shots were struck every 1m by the use of a hammer and a shear wave source. A "simple" velocity evaluation by the Wiechert-Herglotz method shows shear-wave velocities between 270-380 m/s in the first three meters. This depth gradient of velocities is verified by a refraction tomography using the first breaks of each channel. The tomography also shows a high velocity zone of about 470 m/s in the deepest part of the model. A Full Waveform Inversion (FWI) was calculated using the refraction tomography as a start model. The inversion model shows three distinct high velocity zones in a, apart of these anomalies, quite homogeneous model. In these zones, velocity reaches values of more than 500 m/s. The results are in accordance to geoelectrical measurements conducted on the same profile. High velocity zones strongly correlate with areas of higher electrical resistivity. Corings near these velocity and resistivity anomalies show massive layers of limestone starting at a depth of about 1.5m and thus verify the findings of the geophysical investigations.In conclusion, the shear wave seismic measurements are capable of resolving small-scale features even in shallow depths, especially with help of FWI. Together with the geoelectrics and corings, the results deliver an important contribution for the further interpretation of the buried archaeological feature.
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- 2022
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13. Tsunamis in the Caribbean Sea – Implications from coarse-clast deposits and the importance of their shape
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Jan Oetjen, Max Engel, Holger Schüttrumpf, and Helmut Brückner
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This presentation gives an overview of the results of a five-year research project on tsunami-induced boulder transport. It stresses the importance of the exact determination of boulder shapes in contrast to simplified bodies (such as cuboids), especially with regard to the transport distance. It also provides insights about a newly developed numerical boulder-transport model based on Pudasaini (2012). Additionally, some ideas how experimental research on tsunami-induced boulder transport may be improved and coordinated in the future will be presented.The investigations by physical experiments are based on three boulder shapes of which one depicts the replica of an original boulder from the island of Bonaire (Caribbean Sea, Lesser Antilles). The experiments clearly reveal that the available impact area of the boulder has a great significance; however, this is so far insufficiently considered in analytical equations. In the given case, the comparison between the more streamline-shaped replica of the Bonaire boulder and an idealised cuboid boulder resulted in reduced transport distances of 30 %, in average. Additionally, statistical evaluations revealed that the entire process is highly sensitive with partly stochastic behaviour. Thus, we support the statement of Bressan et al. (2018) in this regard. We show, how important it is to calculate and communicate wave thresholds for mobilisation in terms of probability ranges instead of fixed values.Based on the results of our own physical experiments and the evaluation of published physical experiments, we developed a tool, which supports researchers in assessing the accuracy of analytical equations for specific in-situ settings (Oetjen et al., 2021). This tool encompasses the crucial parameters (e.g., bottom roughness, boulder shape), combines their influence on the transport process and finally gives an indication of whether the present conditions tend to amplify or hamper the boulder transport. The benefit and the usage of the above-mentioned tool will be demonstrated exemplarily.Furthermore, within the framework of the project a numerical Boulder-Transport-Model was developed which is based on the Immersed Boundary Method and the Two-Phase Flow Model of Pudasaini (2012). Insights into the functionality of the model and the importance of the increased flow density will be highlighted, while the further development steps will be indicated.As part of the project, we also dealt with the future development of research on tsunami-induced boulder transport (cf. Oetjen et al., 2021). One important suggestion is to establish a standardised reference setup for experimental investigations within the research community. It would enable researchers to compare the results of their own experiments and the effect of the investigated parameters with well-documented reference values and assist them to evaluate and classify their experimental results accordingly. Bressan, L., Guerrero, M., Antonini, A., Petruzzelli, V., Archetti, R., Lamberti, A., Tinti, S. (2018): A laboratory experiment on the incipient motion of boulders by high-energy coastal flows. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 43 (14), 2935–2947. DOI: 10.1002/esp.4461.Oetjen, J., Engel., M., Schüttrumpf, H. (2021): Experiments on tsunami induced boulder transport – a review. Earth-Science Reviews 220. DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103714.Pudasaini, S.P. (2012): A general two-phase debris flow model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface 117, F03010. DOI: 10.1029/2011JF002186.
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- 2022
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14. Holocene offshore tsunami archive – Tsunami deposits on the Algarve shelf (Portugal)
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Lisa Feist, Pedro J.M. Costa, Piero Bellanova, Ivana Bosnic, Juan I. Santisteban, César Andrade, Helmut Brückner, João F. Duarte, Jannis Kuhlmann, Jan Schwarzbauer, Andreas Vött, and Klaus Reicherter
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Stratigraphy ,Geology - Published
- 2023
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15. Was ist Geoarchäologie? – Eine Einführung
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Helmut Brückner, Christopher E. Miller, and Christian Stolz
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- 2022
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16. Dating dry-stone walls with rock surface luminescence: A case study from the Italian Alps
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Lucas Ageby, Diego E. Angelucci, Dominik Brill, Francesco Carrer, Helmut Brückner, and Nicole Klasen
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Archeology ,Rock surface luminescence dating Luminescence-depth profiles IRSL Dry-stone walls - Published
- 2022
17. The Baelo Claudia Tsunami Archive (SW Spain)—Archaeological Deposits of High-Energy Events
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Klaus Reicherter, Fernando Prados, Helena Jiménez-Vialás, Ivan García-Jiménez, Lisa Feist, Cristina Val-Peón, Nicole Höbig, Margret Mathes-Schmidt, José Antonio López-Sáez, Joschka Röth, Simoni Alexiou, Pablo G. Silva Barroso, Christoph Cämmerer, Laetitia Borau, Simon Matthias May, Werner Kraus, Helmut Brückner, Christoph Grützner, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), López Sáez, José Antonio [0000-0002-3122-2744], and López Sáez, José Antonio
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Landscape changes ,Archaeology ,Spain ,Extreme wave events ,Event dating ,Tsunami deposits - Abstract
Over the past decades, substantial progress has been made in tsunami research. Be that as it may, little is still known about tsunami deposits and their related depositional mechanisms in coastal areas in historical and archaeological contexts. In particular, the Phoenician, Greek and Roman trade and military networks along the Mediterranean and Atlantic coasts, with their cities, harbours and additional facilities, are susceptible to serving as archives for extreme wave events. The ruins of the Roman city of Baelo Claudia, located on the Bay of Bolonia Bay (southern Spain), offer a unique environment for studying historical tsunamis in the Gulf of Cadiz. Baelo Claudia suffered at least two earthquakes in Roman times, namely, in the first and fourth centuries CE. The latter, associated with a tsunami, led to the city’s destruction and subsequent decline. Accordingly, three tsunami deposits in Baelo Claudia, dated to ca. 4000 cal BP (2000 BCE), ca. 400 CE and 1755 CE, the last corresponding to the Lisbon tsunami, are described here. The multi-disciplinary research conducted on the sedimentary, archaeological and palaeontological records has revealed event deposits, together with major landscape changes in the environs of the bay after tsunami landfall. Furthermore, the significant archaeoseismic damage detected in recently excavated buildings has been dated to the end of the fourth-century CE. The results presented here serve to supplement the earthquake and tsunami record of coastal Iberia., The authors are grateful to German Science Foundation (DFG grant, RE 1361/28-1) and the MINECO-FEDER Spanish Research Project CGL2015-67169-P (QTECSPAIN-USAL) for their support.
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- 2022
18. The unexpectedly short Holocene Humid Period in Northern Arabia
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Achim Brauer, Philipp Hoelzmann, Peter Frenzel, Birgit Plessen, Rik Tjallingii, Anja Schwarz, Gerd Gleixner, Anna Pint, Helmut Brückner, Kim J. Krahn, Max Engel, Valérie F. Schwab, Ina Neugebauer, Michèle Dinies, and Nadine Dräger
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FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences ,Sedimentology ,Monsoon ,Palaeoclimate ,Greening ,Geography ,Geochemistry ,Archaeology ,Limnology ,Period (geology) ,500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik::550 Geowissenschaften, Geologie::550 Geowissenschaften ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Physical geography ,Holocene ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
The early to middle Holocene Humid Period led to a greening of today’s arid Saharo-Arabian desert belt. While this phase is well defined in North Africa and the Southern Arabian Peninsula, robust evidence from Northern Arabia is lacking. Here we fill this gap with unprecedented annually to sub-decadally resolved proxy data from Tayma, the only known varved lake sediments in Northern Arabia. Based on stable isotopes, micro-facies analyses and varve and radiocarbon dating, we distinguish five phases of lake development and show that the wet phase in Northern Arabia from 8800–7900 years BP is considerably shorter than the commonly defined Holocene Humid Period (~11,000–5500 years BP). Moreover, we find a two century-long peak humidity at times when a centennial-scale dry anomaly around 8200 years BP interrupted the Holocene Humid Period in adjacent regions. The short humid phase possibly favoured Neolithic migrations into Northern Arabia representing a strong human response to environmental changes.
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- 2022
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19. Geoarchäologie in unterschiedlichen Landschaftsräumen
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Thomas Birndorfer, Helmut Brückner, Olaf Bubenzer, Markus Dotterweich, Stefan Dreibrodt, Hanna Hadler, Peter Houben, Katja Kothieringer, Frank Lehmkuhl, Susan M. Mentzer, Christopher E. Miller, Dirk Nowacki, Thomas Reitmaier, Astrid Röpke, Wolfgang Schirmer, Martin Seeliger, Christian Stolz, Hans von Suchodoletz, Christian Tinapp, Johann Friedrich Tolksdorf, Andreas Vött, and Christoph Zielhofer
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- 2022
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20. At the Mercy of the Sea—Vulnerability of Roman Coastal Settlements in the Algarve (Portugal). Boca do Rio as an Emblematic Example of a Key Maritime Industry
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Florian Hermann, Lisa Feist, Felix Teichner, João Pedro Bernardes, Klaus Reicherter, and Helmut Brückner
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- 2022
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21. Sediment-filled karst depressions and riyad – key archaeological environments of south Qatar
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Stephan Opitz, Stefanie Rückmann, Kim T. Peis, Dominik Brill, Helmut Brückner, Ricardo Eichmann, Philipp Drechsler, Christoph Gerber, Kristina Pfeiffer, Jörg W. E. Fassbinder, Max Engel, Anna Pint, and Dennis Wolf
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010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Landform ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Karst ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Barchan ,Aeolian processes ,Sedimentary rock ,Holocene ,Beach morphodynamics ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Systematic archaeological exploration of southern Qatar started in the 1950s. However, detailed local and regional data on climatic fluctuations and landscape changes during the Holocene, pivotal for understanding and reconstructing human–environment interactions, are still lacking. This contribution provides an overview on the variability of geomorphic environments of southern Qatar with a focus on depression landforms, which reveal a rich archaeological heritage ranging from Palaeolithic(?) and Early Neolithic times to the Modern era. Based on a detailed geomorphic mapping campaign, sediment cores and optically stimulated luminescence data, the dynamics of riyad (singular rawdha; shallow, small-scale, sediment-filled karst depressions clustering in the central southern peninsula) and the larger-scale Asaila depression near the western coast are studied in order to put archaeological discoveries into a wider environmental context. Geomorphic mapping of the Asaila basin shows a much greater geomorphic variability than documented in literature so far with relict signs of surface runoff. An 8 m long sediment core taken in the sabkha-type sand flats of the western basin reveals a continuous dominance of aeolian morphodynamics during the early to mid-Holocene. Mounds preserved by evaporite horizons representing capillarites originally grown in the vadose zone are a clear sign of groundwater-level drop after the sea-level highstand ca. 6000–4500 years ago. Deflation followed the lowering of the Stokes surface, leaving mounds where the relict capillarites were able to fixate and preserve the palaeo-surface. Abundant archaeological evidence of Early and Middle Neolithic occupation – the latter with a clear focus inside the central Asaila basin – indicate more favourable living conditions than today. In contrast, the sediment record of the investigated riyad in the south is very shallow, younger and controlled by surface discharge, deflation and the constantly diminishing barchan dune cover in Qatar over the Middle and Late Holocene. The young age of the infill (ca. 1500 to 2000 years) explains the absence of findings older than the Late Islamic period. Indicators of current net deflation may relate to a decrease in surface runoff and sediment supply only in recent decades to centuries. In the future, geophysical prospection of the riyad may help to locate thicker sedimentary archives and the analysis of grain size distribution, micromorphology, phytoliths or even pollen spectra may enhance our understanding of the interplay of regional environmental changes and cultural history.
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- 2020
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22. Identification of humid periods in the Atacama Desert through hillslope activity established by infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating
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Volker Wennrich, Alicia Medialdea, Anja Zander, Olaf Bubenzer, Dirk Hoffmeister, Benedikt Ritter, Philipp Schulte, Helmut Brückner, Marie Gröbner, Melanie Bartz, Simon Matthias May, Dominik Brill, Santiago Hurtado, Klaudia F. Kuiper, Georgina E. King, Stephan Opitz, and Earth Sciences
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,Palaeoclimate ,01 natural sciences ,Downhill creep ,Hillslope processes ,Hyper-aridity ,SDG 14 - Life Below Water ,Hillslope deposits ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Colluvium ,Atacama Desert ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Alluvial fan ,Sedimentation ,Arid ,Infrared stimulated luminescence dating ,Denudation ,Physical geography ,Surface runoff ,Geology ,Chronology ,IRSL - Abstract
Geological records indicate that the hyper-aridity in the Atacama Desert has prevailed since at least the mid-Miocene, with shorter periods of increased humidity punctuating long-term aridity. The 7-m-high accumulation of colluvial sediments at the Salar Grande (21°S/70°W) studied here provides a key palaeoclimate record to understand hillslope dynamics and its relation to humid periods. While 10Be surface exposure ages point to long-term surface stability of the flat upslope surface, a combination of humidity-driven soil creep, overland flow and soil creep related to seismic shaking, caused denudation of the hillslope and accumulation of several metres of colluvium over much shorter timescales during the last 130 ka. A robust chronology for the hillslope sediments has been established by using Infrared Stimulated luminescence (pIR-IR225 protocol) on K-feldspar extracts from nine samples collected within the accumulation. A series of tests has been carried out to confirm the suitability of the method. The estimated ages indicate accelerated sedimentation at 35–80 ka, and 100–130 ka, which are interpreted as periods with more humid climate conditions than present. These findings agree with climate variations in the hyper-arid Atacama indicated by the activity of coastal alluvial fans and river catchments.
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- 2020
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23. The Excavation at Limyra/Lycia 2018: Preliminary Report
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Banu Yener-Marksteiner, Ursula Quatember, Alexandra Dolea, Martin Seyer, Helmut Brückner, Selda Baybo, Michael Wörrle, Friederike Stock, A. K. L. Leung, Philip Misha Bes, Günther Stanzl, Anna Symanczyk, David Zs. Schwarcz, and Kathrin Kugler
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010506 paleontology ,History ,060102 archaeology ,Preliminary report ,Spatial expansion ,0601 history and archaeology ,Excavation ,Hellenistic period ,06 humanities and the arts ,General Medicine ,Ancient history ,01 natural sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
1. Research Focus “Urbanistic Studies in Limyra” (M. Seyer) The focus in 2018 should be laid in investigations on the urbanistic development of Limyra mainly during the Hellenistic period. Excavation and research work could be carried out in the frame of the scientific project “The Urbanistic Development of Limyra in the Hellenistic Period”. This project deals with general questions such as the spatial expansion respectively the borders of the settlement, the structural development of the cit...
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- 2019
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24. Coastal lowland and floodplain evolution along the lower reaches of the Supsa River (western Georgia)
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Stephan Opitz, Levan Navrozashvili, Hannes Laermanns, Daniel Kelterbaum, Giorgi Kirkitadze, Simon Matthias May, Helmut Brückner, and Mikheil Elashvili
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Delta ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Floodplain ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,law.invention ,lcsh:Geology ,law ,Beach ridge ,Alluvium ,Physical geography ,Radiocarbon dating ,Progradation ,Sea level ,Holocene ,Geology - Abstract
In the southernmost part of the Colchian plain (Georgia), the Supsa and Rioni rivers represent important catchments for reconstructing Holocene landscape changes. Using granulometric methods, geochemical analyses and radiocarbon dating, we demonstrate that significant palaeoenvironmental changes have taken place in the surroundings of the Supsa fan since at least 4000 BCE. The initial foothill fan accumulation was prolonged by delta plain progradation. Due to continued fluvial sediment supply, mainly from the Rioni, the lagoon silted up and extended peat bogs formed east of the beach ridge complex. The Supsa fan first prograded northwards (since the third millennium BCE) and later shifted westwards, eventually following an avulsion of the Rioni. While Supsa deposits remain limited to the area of the fan and the modern estuary, the alluvial fines of the Rioni dominate the surrounding areas. The relative sea-level (RSL) index points of the region suggest a gradual RSL rise from ∼-9 m between 4000 and 3500 BCE to −3/−2 m below the modern sea level in the second half of the first millennium BCE, the period during which Greek colonization and Colchian settlements are attested by archaeological remains.
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- 2019
25. The sedimentological and environmental footprint of extreme wave events in Boca do Rio, Algarve coast, Portugal
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Peter Biermanns, Sebastian Frank, Klaus Reicherter, Lisa Feist, Hannes Laermanns, Pedro Costa, Dominik Brill, Helmut Brückner, Jan Schwarzbauer, Piero Bellanova, Felix Teichner, Christoph Cämmerer, and Margret Mathes-Schmidt
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010506 paleontology ,Stratigraphy ,Micropaleontology ,Sediment ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Coring ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,Granulometry ,law ,Clastic rock ,Sedimentary rock ,Alluvium ,Radiocarbon dating ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
In 1755 CE, a strong earthquake followed by a transatlantic tsunami destroyed large coastal areas; it also left its sedimentary imprints in the Boca do Rio valley (western Algarve, Portugal). This tsunami layer is very well preserved and has been analysed in several studies. Deposits of preceding extreme wave events, however, have rarely been described for the entire Algarve coast. In this study, we present a multiproxy analysis of seven sediment cores from the Boca do Rio region, organized in two crossing transects, one parallel and the other perpendicular to the coastline. The geochronological framework has been established by combining radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating with sedimentological and geochemical analyses (XRF, C/N, magnetic susceptibility, granulometry, micropalaeontology), and covers the palaeogeographical evolution of that area for the last four millennia. As expected, the 1755 CE tsunami was easily identified at all coring sites, as a sandwiched stratum between fine-grained alluvium. This event layer presents several tsunami characteristics, such as erosive basal contact, rip-up clasts, a fining-upward sequence, and a mud cap. At one coring site, a second extreme wave event layer of marine origin was detected within floodplain deposits, due to its granulometric, XRF, magnetic susceptibility and micropalaeontological properties. It is stratigraphically located below the 1755 CE Lisbon tsunami layer and can be associated with another yet undocumented extreme wave event, most likely dating to the mid or late 1st millennium CE.
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- 2019
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26. Elaia, Pergamon's maritime satellite: the rise and fall of an ancient harbour city shaped by shoreline migration
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Svenja Riedesel, Helmut Brückner, Andreas Bolten, Martin Seeliger, Stefan Feuser, Peter Frenzel, Anna Pint, Nick Marriner, and Felix Pirson
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Shore ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Micropaleontology ,Paleontology ,Oceanography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Harbour ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Satellite ,Palaeogeography ,computer ,Geology ,computer.programming_language - Published
- 2019
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27. Using DRAC in complex geometries - TL dating of heated flints from Taibeh, Jordan
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David Strebler, Dominik Brill, Jürgen Richter, and Helmut Brückner
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010506 paleontology ,Series (stratigraphy) ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Equivalent dose ,Stratigraphy ,Mineralogy ,Sediment ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Plant foods ,01 natural sciences ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Dose rate ,Wadi ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The archaeological site of Taibeh located south of Wadi Musa, Jordan, incorporates at least two, maybe even five, successive layers associated with the Late Ahmarian, also known as Masraqan, technocomplex. The Masraqan is elsewhere connected with the beginning of the intensive use of plant food and with permanent settlements. Taibeh could be the first site to present as much as 5 successive layers of this cultural unit. The Masraqan is relatively well constrained in time, usually dated between 18 and 25 ka BP. A series of heated flints was collected at Taibeh to be dated using TL. Two informations are required for the estimation of a TL age: the equivalent dose ( D e ) which is the dose accumulated in the flint since it had been heated, and the dose rate ( D ˙ ) to which the flint is exposed during the burial time. The D e estimation was done applying two different protocols, and both produced consistent results. The D ˙ estimation was realised using a modified version of DRAC (Durcan et al., 2015) which allows to use different radio-element concentrations for the flints and the surrounding sediment.
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- 2019
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28. Single-grain TT-OSL dating results confirm an Early Pleistocene age for the lower Moulouya River deposits (NE Morocco)
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Martina Demuro, Melanie Bartz, Lee J. Arnold, Georgina E. King, Josep María Parés, Mathieu Duval, Gilles Rixhon, Helmut Brückner, and C. Álvarez Posada
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010506 paleontology ,Paleontology ,Early Pleistocene ,Stratigraphy ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Optical dating ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
M. Bartz, L.J. Arnold, M. Demuro, M. Duval, G.E. King, G. Rixhon, C. Alvarez Posada, J.M. Pares, H. Bruckner
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- 2019
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29. Violet stimulated luminescence as an alternative for dating complex colluvial sediments in the Atacama Desert
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Alicia Medialdea, Dominik Brill, Georgina E. King, Anja Zander, Maria Rosa Lopez-Ramirez, Melanie Bartz, and Helmut Brückner
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Stratigraphy ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Geology - Published
- 2022
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30. Comment on essd-2021-49
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Helmut Brückner
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- 2021
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31. Holocene Climate Variability of Mesopotamia and its Impact on the History of Civilisation
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Max Engel and Helmut Brückner
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Civilization ,Geography ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Mesopotamia ,Urbanization ,Environmental determinism ,Climate change ,Physical geography ,Holocene ,Marine transgression ,media_common ,Asian studies - Abstract
Mesopotamia, known as the cradle of civilisation, gave rise to the first state-based urban societies with sophistic political hierarchies. Its rich history full of important cultural achievements was accompanied by fundamental environmental changes over the Holocene. While geo-bio-archives from the broader region reflect slightly varying climate histories, there is a clear consensus on a more humid climate regime during the Early Holocene, triggering early rain-fed agricultural practices in Northern Mesopotamia representing the foundation of initial urbanisation. In the southern basin, declining rainfall and higher competition for natural resources at a somewhat later stage in combination with the development of irrigation techniques and the transgression of the Arabian Gulf seem to have contributed to the formation of complex state-based urban societies at sites such as Eridu, Ur, and Uruk, where landscape dynamics are well-preserved in the stratigraphic record. Against the background of long-term climate trends, it seems that also Rapid Climate Change events—short-term climatic anomalies such as identified around 8,200, 5,200, or 4,200 BP—have taken their toll on Mesopotamian people. Many links between changes in climate and landscape, and socio-technical adaptation based on interdisciplinary research seem straightforward, especially where confirmation exists by cuneiform texts or archaeological evidence. The gap in chronological resolution between rather precise information on historical state development on the one hand, and on climatic changes with a much higher uncertainty on the other hand, may generate an elusive fit between records and requires caution in any attempt of environmental determinism when trying to explain cultural history.
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- 2021
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32. Mid- to late-Holocene sea-level evolution of the northeastern Aegean sea
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Anca Dan, Giorgio Spada, Martin Seeliger, Katharina Seeger, Helmut Brückner, Nick Marriner, Matteo Vacchi, Peter Frenzel, Thomas Schmidts, Friederike Seeger, Sait Başaran, Anna Pint, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität = Friedrich Schiller University Jena [Jena, Germany], Théoriser et modéliser pour aménager (UMR 6049) (ThéMA), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Bourgogne (UB)-Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC), Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna [Bologna] (UNIBO), Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra [Pisa], University of Pisa - Università di Pisa, Ankara Yıldırım Beyazıt University (AYBU), Archéologie et Philologie d'Orient et d'Occident (AOROC), École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Hellénismes d’Asie et civilisations orientales, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Universität Heidelberg [Heidelberg], Universität zu Köln, Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Bourgogne (UB), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Seeliger, Martin, Pint, Anna, Frenzel, Peter, Marriner, Nick, Spada, Giorgio, Vacchi, Matteo, Başaran, Sait, Dan, Anca, Seeger, Friederike, Seeger, Katharina, Schmidts, Thoma, Brückner, Helmut, and Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
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010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,ddc:550 ,archeological sea-level limiting points ,14. Life underwater ,Trough (meteorology) ,ddc:930 ,Sea level ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,ddc:910 ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,Plateau ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Meriç River ,Subsidence ,Post-glacial rebound ,RSL curve ,Tectonics ,sea-level indicator ,archeological sea-level limiting points, foraminifers, Meriç River, RSL curve, sea-level indicator ,[SDU.STU.ST]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Stratigraphy ,Facies ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,foraminifers ,Geology - Abstract
International audience; We combined biostratigraphical analyses, archaeological surveys, and Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) models to provide new insights into the relative sea-level evolution in the northeastern Aegean Sea (eastern Mediterranean). In this area, characterized by a very complex tectonic pattern, we produced a new typology of sea-level index point, based on the foraminiferal associations found in transgressive marine facies. Our results agree with the sea-level history previously produced in this region, therefore confirming the validity of this new type of index point. The expanded dataset presented in this paper further demonstrates a continuous Holocene RSL rise in this portion of the Aegean Sea. Comparing the new RSL record with the available geophysical predictions of sea-level evolution indicates that the crustal subsidence of the Samothraki Plateau and the North Aegean Trough played a major role in controlling millennial-scale sea-level evolution in the area. This major subsidence rate needs to be taken into account in the preparation of local future scenarios of sea-level rise in the coming decades.
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- 2021
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33. Chronological Assessment of the Balta Alba Kurgan Loess-Paleosol Section (Romania) – A Comparative Study on Different Dating Methods for a Robust and Precise Age Model
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Stephanie Scheidt, Sonja Berg, Ulrich Hambach, Nicole Klasen, Stephan Pötter, Alexander Stolz, Daniel Veres, Christian Zeeden, Dominik Brill, Helmut Brückner, Stephanie Kusch, Christian Laag, Frank Lehmkuhl, Martin Melles, Florian Monnens, Lukas Oppermann, Janet Rethemeyer, and Janina J. Nett
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010506 paleontology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,age-depth modeling ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,law ,Loess ,ddc:550 ,Radiocarbon dating ,lcsh:Science ,loess-paleosol sequences ,tephrochronology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Geomagnetic secular variation ,optically stimulated luminescence dating ,Paleosol ,compound-specific radiocarbon analysis ,Stratigraphy ,magnetic stratigraphy ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,lcsh:Q ,Tephrochronology ,Geology ,Chronology - Abstract
Frontiers in Earth Science 8, 598448 (2021). doi:10.3389/feart.2020.598448 special issue: "Research Topic: Integrating Paleoclimate, Stratigraphy, Sedimentology & Paleontology in Human Evolution and Dispersal Studies - from Early Hominins to the Holocene", Published by Frontiers Media, Lausanne
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- 2021
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34. On the role of sediment compaction and tectonic subsidence in relative sea-level reconstructions - A case study from the Apuo-Versilian coastal plain (NW Mediterranean)
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Pappalardo, Marta, Alessandro, Chelli, Bini, Monica, Helmut, Brückner, Morigi, Caterina, and Ragaini, Luca
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Vertical land movements ,Holocene ,Relative sea-level change, Vertical land movements, GIA models validation, Minerogenic sediments, Holocene, NW Italy ,GIA models validation ,Relative sea-level change ,NW Italy ,Minerogenic sediments - Published
- 2021
35. Mid‐ to late Holocene environmental changes and human‐environment interactions in the surroundings of La Silla del Papa, SW Spain
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Klaus Reicherter, Anna Pint, Dominik Brill, Kira Raith, Pierre Moret, Simon Matthias May, Maike Norpoth, Gilles Rixhon, César León‐Martín, Ignasi Grau‐Mira, Helena Jiménez‐Vialás, Dirce Marzoli, Helmut Brückner, Lyudmila S. Shumilovskikh, Ivan García-Jiménez, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Prehistoria, Arqueología, Historia Antigua, Filología Griega y Filología Latina, Arqueología y Patrimonio Histórico, Institute of Geography, University of Cologne, Universität zu Köln, Travaux et recherches archéologiques sur les cultures, les espaces et les sociétés (TRACES), École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (MCC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Norpoth, Maike, 1Institute of Geography, University of Cologne Cologne Germany, Pint, Anna, Shumilovskikh, Lyudmila, 2 Department of Palynology and Climate Dynamics, Albrecht‐von‐Haller‐Institute for Plant Sciences Georg‐August‐University Göttingen Göttingen Germany, Raith, Kira, 4 Department of Social Sciences, Human Origins and Palaeoenvironments Research Group Oxford Brookes University Oxford UK, Brill, Dominik, Rixhon, Gilles, 5 Laboratoire Image Ville Environnement (LIVE), Faculté de géographie et d'aménagement, Ecole Nationale du Génie de l'Eau et de l'Environnement (ENGEES) Université de Strasbourg Strasbourg France, Moret, Pierre, 6 Laboratoire TRACES – UMR 5608 du CNRS Université de Toulouse Toulouse France, Jiménez‐Vialás, Helena, Grau‐Mira, Ignasi, 8 University of Alicante Sant Vicent del Raspeig Spain, García‐Jiménez, Iván, 9 Conjunto Arqueológico de Baelo Claudia, Área de Investigación y Conservación Tarifa Cádiz Spain, Marzoli, Dirce, 10 Department of Madrid German Archaeological Institute Madrid Spain, León‐Martín, César, Reicherter, Klaus, 11 Neotectonics and Natural Hazards RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany, and Brückner, Helmut
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sea‐level evolution ,010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Human environment ,[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,Baelo Claudia ,[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences ,01 natural sciences ,La Silla del Papa ,Arqueología ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,coastal changes ,ddc:550 ,0601 history and archaeology ,14. Life underwater ,геоархеологические исследования ,Испания ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,окружающая среда ,soil erosion ,060102 archaeology ,Coastal changes ,Microfaunal investigation ,поздний голоцен ,06 humanities and the arts ,[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography ,15. Life on land ,Archaeology ,561.13 ,Geography ,Archeostraits project ,palynological analyses ,13. Climate action ,средний голоцен ,Soil erosion ,Zahara de los Atunes ,Sea‐level evolution ,microfaunal investigation - Abstract
In southern Iberia, the surroundings of the Strait of Gibraltar are known as a crossroad for population movements, cultural exchanges, and trade from Late Prehistory to modern times. However, questions remain about the impact of this historical development on the environment. The settlement of La Silla del Papa, an important hillfort in southern Andalusia (Cádiz), was occupied during the entire Iron Age, replaced by the coastal town Baelo Claudia during Roman times, and re‐occupied during Early Medieval times. As such, La Silla del Papa and its territory represent an ideal location for long‐term studies on human‐environment interactions. Within the framework of the interdisciplinary project “Archeostraits,” geoarchaeological investigations in the surroundings of La Silla del Papa aimed at constraining ecological conditions and human‐environment interactions during the mid‐ and late Holocene and during major human occupation phases. Our results document an early mid‐Holocene marine embayment in the lower floodplain of the Río del Cachón, rapidly turning into a coastal lagoon and later into freshwater‐dominated wetlands. After approximately 2100 BP (c. 150 BC), fluvial and alluvial deposition i600ing a high anthropogenic impact on the local landscape during Roman or post‐Roman times. Palynological results reveal fluctuating agricultural and pastoral activities and distinct periods of landscape opening during the Neolithic and Iron Age., Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659, Agence Nationale de la Recherche http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001665
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- 2021
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36. OSL rock surface exposure dating as a novel approach for reconstructing transport histories of coastal boulders over decadal to centennial timescales
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Dominik Brill, Christoph Burow, Simon Matthias May, Nadia Mhammdi, Anja Zander, Benjamin Lehmann, Helmut Brückner, Dennis Wolf, and Georgina E. King
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Calcarenite ,Surface exposure dating ,Source rock ,Lithology ,Clastic rock ,visual_art ,Erosion ,Geochemistry ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Feldspar ,Geology ,Chronology - Abstract
Wave-transported boulders represent important records of storm and tsunami impact over geological timescales. Their use for hazard assessment requires chronological information that in many cases cannot be achieved by established dating approaches. To fill this gap, this study investigated, for the first time, the potential of optically stimulated luminescence rock surface exposure dating (OSL-RSED) for estimating transport ages of wave-emplaced coastal boulders. The approach was applied to calcarenite clasts at the Rabat coast, Morocco. Calibration of the OSL-RSED model was based on samples with rock surfaces exposed to sunlight for ~ 2 years, and OSL exposure ages were evaluated against age control deduced from satellite images. Our results show that the dating precision is limited for all boulders due to the local source rock lithology which has low amounts of quartz and feldspar. The dating accuracy may be affected by erosion rates on boulder surfaces of 0.06–0.2 mm/year. Nevertheless, we propose a robust relative chronology for boulders that are not affected by significant post-depositional erosion and that share surface angles of inclination with the calibration samples. The relative chronology indicates that (i) most boulders were moved by storm waves; (ii) these storms lifted boulders with masses of up to ~ 40 t; and (iii) the role of storms for the formation of boulder deposits along the Rabat coast is much more significant than previously assumed. Although OSL-RSED cannot provide reliable absolute exposure ages for the coastal boulders in this study, the approach has large potential for boulder deposits composed of rocks with larger amounts of quartz or feldspar, older formation histories and less susceptibility to erosion.
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- 2020
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37. Use of high-resolution seismic reflection data for paleogeographical reconstruction of shallow Lake Yamanaka (Fuji Five Lakes, Japan)
- Author
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Laura Lamair, M. De Batist, Yusuke Yokoyama, Osamu Fujiwara, Stephen P Obrochta, Koen De Rycker, Vanessa M.A. Heyvaert, Yosuke Miyairi, Jan Walstra, Atsunori Nakamura, Helmut Brückner, Ed Garrett, Eisuke Ono, Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari, Evelien Boes, Svenja Riedesel, Shinya Yamamoto, Yoshiki Sato, and Masanobu Shishikura
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010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Floodplain ,Paleontology ,Wetland ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Water level ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Volcano ,Sedimentary rock ,Physical geography ,Scoria ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
High-resolution seismic profiles, combined with the integration of published drilling data, provide a detailed paleoenvironmental history of Lake Yamanaka (Fuji Five Lakes, Japan). This study presents a detailed analysis of the different depositional stages of the area currently occupied by Lake Yamanaka (floodplain wetland, river and lake). From ca. 5500 cal yr BP to ca. 5050 cal yr BP, the Yamanaka basin was occupied by floodplain wetlands. During that period, the landscape was very stable and erosion on northeastern flank of Mt. Fuji was relatively limited. From ca. 5050 cal yr BP to ca. 3050 cal yr BP, the water level increased and the floodplain wetlands became a lake. From ca. 3050 cal yr BP to ca. 2050 cal yr BP, the water level progressively decreased, leading to a reduction in lake extent. During this lowering of the lake's water level, a 1 km2 mass-transport deposit modified the physiography of the lake floor. From ca. 2050 cal yr BP to ca. 1050 cal yr BP, the lake disappeared and a river flowing towards the northwest occupied the depression. Ponds occupied morphological lows formed by mass-transport deposits. From ca. 1050 cal yr BP to the present day, the lake water level rose again, connecting the ponds with the main lake. Since then, the lake water level has continued to rise to the current level. Lake water level fluctuations are the results of several factors that could be interconnected: (i) changes in precipitation rates; (ii) margin destabilization (the Yamanaka mass-transport deposit), (iii) changes in river inlets and therefore variation in water supplies, (iv) volcanic eruptions (scoria fall-out and lava flows) and (v) changes in vegetation cover. This study highlights the importance of coupling sediment cores and high-resolution seismic reflection profiling to identify lateral variation and modification of sedimentary inputs through time.
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- 2019
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38. Vertical and lateral distribution of Foraminifera and Ostracoda in the East Frisian Wadden Sea – developing a transfer function for relative sea-level change
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Friederike Bungenstock, Peter Frenzel, Juliane Scheder, Helmut Brückner, Max Engel, and Anna Pint
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010506 paleontology ,Coastal hazards ,biology ,Geoarchaeology ,Intertidal zone ,Storm surge ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Foraminifera ,Oceanography ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Sedimentology ,Holocene ,Sea level ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
In light of rising sea levels and increased storm surge hazards, detailed information on relative sea-level (RSL) histories and local controlling mechanisms is required to support future projections and to better prepare for future coastal-protection challenges. This study contributes to deciphering Holocene RSL changes at the German North Sea coast in high resolution by developing a transfer function for RSL change. Recent associations of Foraminifera and Ostracoda from low intertidal to supratidal settings of the barrier island of Spiekeroog in combination with environmental parameters (granulometry, C/N, TOC, salinity) were investigated and quantified in elevation steps of 15 cm in order to generate a first transfer function (TF) of Holocene RSL change. In a future step, the TF can be applied to the stratigraphic record. Our data show a clear vertical zonation of foraminifer and ostracod taxa between the middle salt marsh and the tidal flat with very few individuals in the sand flat area, suggesting removal by the tidal current or poor preservation. Multivariate statistics identify the elevation, i.e. the inundation frequency, as main driving factor. The smallest vertical error (49 cm) is associated with an entirely new approach of combining Foraminifera and Ostracoda for a TF. Advantages of the TF over classical RSL indicators such as basal and intercalated peat – beside the relatively narrow indicative meaning – include the possible application to a wide range of intertidal facies and that it does not depend on compaction-prone peat.
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- 2019
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39. Late Holocene coastline and landscape changes to the west of Ephesus, Turkey
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Stefan Halder, Friederike Stock, Stephan Opitz, Sabine Ladstätter, Helmut Brückner, Anna Pint, and Sirri Seren
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010506 paleontology ,Tombolo ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ancient city ,Schist ,Sediment ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,Graben ,Paleontology ,Harbour ,computer ,Geology ,Holocene ,Byzantine architecture ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Palaeogeographical research regarding coastline and landscape changes has been conducted in the Kucuk Menderes graben and the environs of the ancient city of Ephesus in Western Turkey for a few decades. Based on geophysical data, multi-proxy and microfaunal analyses of sediment cores, 14 C-AMS age estimates and diagnostic ceramics, this study presents for the first time results of an area close to the present coastline, where a Byzantine church is located on top of a small hill. The results reveal that this mica schist hill turned into an island during the 2nd/1st millennium BCE. It was reconnected to the mainland via a tombolo during the 5th century CE. Drill cores and geophysical measurements surrounding the hill show massive stone layers which were deposited intentionally during the 5th/6th century CE when the Byzantine church was built. Geophysical images point to wall structures in the surroundings of the hill. The area to the northeast hosts a small harbour site. When the coastline continued to shift further to the west, this site was still connected to the sea by the Kucuk Menderes river.
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- 2019
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40. The continental shelf as an offshore archive for tsunami deposits – an example from southwest Iberia (RV METEOR cruise M152)
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Lisa Feist, Klaus Reicherter, Pedro J.M. Costa, Piero Bellanova, Juan I. Santisteban, Ivana Bosnic, Cristina Val-Peón, Jan Schwarzbauer, Mike Frenken, Andreas Vött, Helmut Brückner, Holger Schüttrumpf, César Andrade, João F. Duarte, Jannis Kuhlmann, and the M152 scientific team
- Abstract
In AD 1755 a strong earthquake-generated tsunami destroyed large parts of the southwest Iberian coastline. Data for the study of the sedimentological characteristics and palaeo-ecological effects of the backwash of this well-known AD 1755 Lisbon tsunami and possible preceding events on the continental shelf was obtained during RV METEOR cruise M152 in November 2018, since the hydrodynamics of tsunami backwash currents are as yet poorly understood. Furthermore, the suitability of the shelf as a reliable sedimentary archive for tsunami deposits was investigated.Along the Algarve coast, prominent AD 1755 Lisbon tsunami deposits have been detected onshore for quite some time. Cruise M152 conducted a geophysical survey on the corresponding shelf area to obtain bathymetry and sub-bottom profiles for the recognition of depositional basins. Subsequently, 19 sediment cores were retrieved from the most suitable depositional basins by vibracoring at water depths from 65 to 114 m. The cores were analysed in a multiproxy approach (granulometry, magnetic susceptibility, P-wave velocities, organic and inorganic geochemistry, micropalaeontology). Deposits of the AD 1755 Lisbon tsunami were identified in most of the cores as a thin layer at ca. 20 cm depth.More surprisingly, a second event deposit dating to ca. 3700 years cal. BP was detected at core depths of 122 to 155 cm. It is even traceable in the sub-bottom profiles and consists of a distinctive ca. 30 cm thick well sorted medium-sized siliciclastic sand. Due to the thickness of the deposit an in-depth study of its characteristics was possible. It displays an erosive basal contact followed by a thin matrix-poor shell hash layer, a reversely graded fine sand layer and ultimately a massive, quite homogeneous medium sand resembling the Ta division of the Bouma sequence or the S1, S2 and S3 divisions of the Lowe sequence. The deposit is distinguishable from the silt to silty sand-dominated background sedimentation not only due to the textural and compositional features, but also due to contrasting geophysical and geochemical properties. Terrestrial provenance for (at least parts of) the sediment is revealed by biomarker analysis. Based on these characteristics, the deposit is interpreted as the result of a high density hyperpycnal flow from the coast towards the offshore caused by tsunami backwash. This event layer may be correlated to onshore observations of tsunami deposits along the southwest coast of Spain but has never been identified in Portugal where the onshore record of tsunami deposits only covers the last three millennia.The results of this multiproxy analysis strongly suggest the shallow offshore area below storm wave base to host reliable sedimentary archives for tsunami backwash deposits, which allow the discovery of as yet unknown events. Palaeotsunami research can benefit from the investigation of offshore archives, especially where onshore records are incomplete or sparse.
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- 2020
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41. Uncharted archives – imprints of tsunami backwash deposits on the Algarve shelf (Portugal)
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Piero Bellanova, Klaus Reicherter, Pedro J.M. Costa, Mike Frenken, Lisa Feist, Jan Schwarzbauer, Juan I. Santisteban, Andreas Vött, Ivana Bosnic, Helmut Brückner, Holger Schüttrumpf, César Andrade, João F Duarte, Jannis Kuhlmann, and the M152 scientfic Team
- Abstract
Research on offshore tsunami deposits is scarce and their depositional processes and preservation potential are virtually unexplored. Therefore, the RV Meteor cruise M152 mapped and sampled one coast-parallel and two coast-perpendicular transects at water depths from 65 to 114 m off the Algarve coast (Portugal). This coast was strongly affected by the well-known Lisbon earthquake and tsunami of November 1st, 1755 AD. Numerous onshore locations have been well documented and studied with historic damage reports and modern scientific investigations of the onshore tsunami deposits. However, very scarce information about the backwash, the water masses flowing back into the sea, exists and their imprint on the shelf is unexplored.In order to fill this gap, a total of 19 vibracores were recovered during the RV Meteor cruise M152. For tracing the sedimentary imprint of the AD 1755 tsunami and potential predecessors, a multi-proxy analysis was carried out (sedimentology, micropaleontology, inorganic and organic geochemistry, radiocarbon and OSL dating). Within the offshore Holocene stratigraphic record, at least two event layers of likely tsunami backwash origin were identified based on their significantly different properties compared to the background shelf sediments. The uppermost tsunami layer (at a depth of 16-25 cm in most cores) displays an erosional contact at the base with heterogeneous compositional changes; its bounding radiocarbon ages allow a correlation with the AD 1755 Lisbon tsunami. Organic-geochemical markers, such as n-alkanes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, steroids and fatty acids, show an increased input of terrestrial matter in this offshore AD 1755 event layer.A surprising discovery was another distinct high-energy deposit, i.e. a potential predecessor to the AD 1755 Lisbon tsunami, at a core depth of about 122-155 cm, which was 14C-dated to approx. 3700 yrs cal BP. Due to its erosional base and coarse-grained composition (well-sorted medium sand), as well as the increased terrestrial influence (displayed by biomarkers), it can be assumed that this deposit originates from the backwash of a paleo-tsunami.This multi-proxy approach with sedimentological, micropaleontological, inorganic and organic-geochemical criteria, enabled us to (1) identify of backwash tsunami deposits; (2) establish a recurrence interval; and (3) estimate the hazard potential for the related coastal areas. Results of the M152 cruise demonstrate for the first time that the depositional basins on the Algarve shelf have the potential to reliably archive Holocene tsunami backwash deposits. The low-energy environment of the outer Algarve shelf sets prime conditions for the preservation of tsunami backwash deposits. Thus, these geoarchives offer the possibility to study the mechanisms and hydrodynamics of backwash currents, and to investigate tsunami strata that are not preserved elsewhere.
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- 2020
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42. Coupled controls of climate, geology, and biota on late Pleistocene alluvial fan morphodynamics along the coast of the hyperarid Atacama Desert
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Janek Walk, Paulina Vásquez, Steven A. Binnie, Melanie Bartz, Mark Reyers, Frank Lehmkuhl, Helmut Brückner, Dirk Hoffmeister, Fernando Sepúlveda, Dominik Brill, and Georg Stauch
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Desert (philosophy) ,Oceanography ,Pleistocene ,Alluvial fan ,Biota ,Beach morphodynamics ,Geology - Abstract
In the hyperarid environment of the Atacama Desert, alluvial fans are the principle fluvial geo-archive reflecting variations in climate and tectonics in their architecture. While they have been studied in the core of the desert to reconstruct long-term palaeoenvironmental changes from the Oligocene to the Quaternary and, in particular, to constrain the onset of hyperaridity, alluvial fans along the coast (20.5°S – 25.5°S) are younger and show a much higher activity; thus, they can serve as archives during the Pleistocene to Holocene evolution. However, past and recent morphodynamics of the coastal alluvial fans (CAF) are yet poorly reconstructed so that the understanding of an interplay between climatic, geologic, and biotic controls is still challenging.We related climatic, lithologic, and tectonic source-area characteristics to geomorphometric parameters of the CAF and their catchments. Geomorphometric analyses were conducted based on the 12.5 m TanDEM‑X WorldDEM™, lithological and tectonic data were extracted from regional geological maps, and the frequency of heavy rainfall events derived from a regional Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model was used as a climate parameter. We further combined luminescence dating, cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating, and existing chronological data to constrain the timing of Pleistocene alluvial fan deposition as well as the ages of interbedded marine terraces.Results indicate a primary climatic control on CAF dynamics shown in the functional relationships with catchment hydromorphometrics that mirror a high susceptibility to debris-flows as well as in the temporal pattern of CAF activity. Distinct phases of CAF activity occurred during the late Pleistocene (95–80 ka, 60–45 ka, and 35-20 ka) and the Holocene – driven by atmospheric changes from the Pacific Ocean. The primary source of precipitation is reflected along the latitudinal gradient: frontal systems and cut-off lows mainly originating from the extratropics. Towards the south, an increasing density of Loma vegetation can be observed so that also possible feedback mechanisms of biota on sediment supply need to be considered. While source-area lithology is of negligible relevance for CAF morphodynamics, an important long-term influence of tectonics can be seen in the regional uplift, which in turn controls the catchment shape and relief. From the numerical dating of the marine terraces, uplift rates ranging between ~0.06 and ~0.57 m/ka were derived for the late Pleistocene period.Acknowledgement: TanDEM-X WorldDEM™ data is provided by a DLR Science grant, 2017.References: Bartz, M., Walk, J., Binnie, S.A., Brill, D., Stauch, G., Lehmkuhl, F., Hoffmeister, D., Brückner, H., in press. Late Pleistocene alluvial fan evolution along the coastal Atacama Desert (N Chile). Global and Planetary Change, 103091. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2019.103091Walk, J., Stauch, G., Reyers, M., Vásquez, P., Sepúlveda, F.A., Bartz, M., Hoffmeister, D., Brückner, H., Lehmkuhl, F., 2020. Gradients in climate, geology, and topography affecting coastal alluvial fan morphodynamics in hyperarid regions – The Atacama perspective. Global and Planetary Change 185, 102994. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2019.102994
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- 2020
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43. Lagoa de Santo André - The Holocene evolution of a coastal lake at the Atlantic coast of Portugal
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Sebastian Frank, Hannes Laermanns, Anna Pint, Barbara Wagner, Piero Bellanova, Lisa Feist, Margret Mathes-Schmidt, Klaus Reicherter, and Helmut Brückner
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The Lagoa de Santo André is a coastal lake located ca. 80 km south of Lisbon at the Atlantic coast of Portugal. The region is highly vulnerable to earthquake-triggered tsunami events due to its exposure to the very active tectonic boundary between the Eurasian and the African plates. Despite several natural and artificial breaches of beach barrier in the past, the lagoon still represents an appropriate geo-bio-archive for reconstructing the Holocene palaeoenvironmental evolution. For this purpose, a 10-m-long sediment core was taken from the centre of the lake by using a floating platform. Sedimentological, geochemical and micropalaeontological analyses were performed in order to unravel the former geological and climatic conditions, and to identify short-term events like tsunamis or storm surges that might have crossed or breached the shielding barrier, leaving their footprint in the sedimentary record of the lagoon.The sediment core covers the palaeoenvironmental evolution of Lagoa de Santo André for at least the last eight millennia. The sandy deposits of the lowermost part of the core most likely represent the littoral phase of a palaeo-beach that had developed when the postglacial marine transgression had reached the area. Above alternating layers indicate varying environmental conditions that are characterised by peat growth, stagnant-water areas and intercalating sand layers that deposited during disconnections from and reconnections with the open sea. Since 3000 BC at the latest, the longshore transport had formed a beach barrier that separated the coastal lake from the open sea. As yet no deposits of an extreme wave event have been detected. However, the ongoing microfaunal analysis will clarify, if sudden changes of the salinity have occurred due to significant saltwater intrusions, which would hint at potential extreme wave events.
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- 2020
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44. OSL rock surface exposure dating as a novel approach for reconstructing transport histories of coastal boulders over decadal to centennial timescales
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Dennis Wolf, Christoph Burow, Helmut Brückner, Georgina E. King, Simon Matthias May, Dominik Brill, Nadia Mhammdi, and Anja Zander
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Paleontology ,Centennial ,Surface exposure dating ,Geology - Abstract
Wave transported boulders represent important records of storm and tsunami impact over geological timescales. Their use for hazard assessment requires chronological information that in many cases cannot be achieved by established dating approaches such as radiocarbon and U-Th dating. To fill this gap, we investigated the potential of optically stimulated luminescence rock surface exposure dating for estimating transport ages of coastal boulders. The approach was applied to wave-emplaced calcarenite clasts at the Rabat coast, Morocco. Calibration of the OSL surface exposure model was based on samples with rock surfaces exposed for ~2 years, and OSL exposure ages were evaluated against age control deduced from satellite images. The dating precision is very limited for all boulders due to the local source rock lithology, which contains low amounts of quartz and feldspar and was formed after MIS 5 (OSL signals are not in field saturation). Nevertheless, we propose a robust relative chronology for boulders that are not affected by significant post-depositional erosion and that share surface angle of inclination with the calibration samples. The relative chronology indicates that most boulders were moved by storm waves; these storms lifted boulders with masses of up to ~40 t; indicating that the role of storms for the formation of boulder deposits along the Rabat coast is much more significant than assumed previously. While OSL rock surface exposure dating cannot provide reliable absolute exposure ages for the coastal boulders from Rabat, the approach has great potential for boulder deposits composed of rocks with larger amounts of quartz or feldspar, older formation histories and lower susceptibility for erosion.
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- 2020
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45. Exploring the application of IRSL rock surface exposure dating of archaeological stone structures in Val di Sole, Italy
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Dominik Brill, Diego E. Angelucci, Francesco Carrer, Helmut Brückner, Lucas Ageby, and Nicole Klasen
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Surface exposure dating ,Archaeology ,Geology - Abstract
Reconstructing exposure histories of rock surfaces with luminescence dating is a recently developed tool which has proven valuable to chronologically constrain archaeological rock structures (e.g. Sohbati et al., 2012). Here, we explore the possibility to use infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) exposure dating to constrain the period of usage of two dry stone enclosure complexes (MZ001S and MZ005S) in Val di Sole, Trentino, Italy. Archaeological investigations confirm that the enclosures were used to keep livestock and radiocarbon ages and archaeological finds from MZ005S restrain the oldest time of use to the Late Middle Ages or Early Modern Period (Carrer and Angelucci, 2018). One 19th-century potshard has been recovered from MZ001S and interviews with residents indicate that MZ001S may have been in use until the mid-20th century. Mica and quartz-rich gneiss rocks of both structures were sampled, together with calibration rock surfaces which had been exposed for one year. Cores were extracted from the rocks with a water-cooled bench drill and cut with a cooled precision saw. Whole rock slices (approx. 0.7 mm thin) were heated to 180 °C for 100 seconds and were subsequently measured with infrared diodes at 50 °C for 300 seconds to create IRSL-depth profiles. Exposure ages were calculated with the exposure dating model developed by Sohbati et al. (2011) for which we used de-trapping rates calculated from the exposed calibration surfaces. IRSL-with-depth profiles are presented from both natural and calibration surfaces. Preliminary ages severely underestimate expected exposure ages (decades of exposure, compared to expected centuries of exposure) and precision of the ages is low. More investigations are necessary but possible reasons for this age discrepancy are denudation of the rock surface, heterogenic mineralogy with patches of opaque minerals which locally increase light attenuation, or the calibration samples do not represent good analogues for the rocks from the stone structures. The low precision of the ages appears to originate from variations in the IRSL-depth profiles between different cores cut from the same sample. ReferencesCarrer, F., Angelucci, D.E., 2018. Continuity and discontinuity in the history of upland pastoral landscapes: the case study of Val Molinac and Val Poré (Val di Sole, Trentino, Eastern Italian Alps). Landscape Research 43, 862–877. doi:10.1080/01426397.2017.1390078.Sohbati, R., Murray, A., Jain, M., Buylaert, J.P., Thomsen, K., 2011. Investigating the resetting of OSL signals in rock surfaces. Geochronometria 38. doi:https://doi.org/10.2478/s13386-011-0029-2.Sohbati, R., Murray, A. S., Chapot, M. S., Jain, M., and Pederson, J. 2012. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) as a chronometer for surface exposure dating J. Geophys. Res., 117, doi:10.1029/2012JB009383.
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- 2020
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46. Roman traces in Germania magna: New thermoluminescence and pIRIR 290 data from a lime kiln at Bergisch Gladbach, Germany
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Helmut Brückner, E. Classen, Janet Rethemeyer, David Strebler, and Anja Zander
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010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,History ,Fine grain ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Metallurgy ,Lime kiln ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Thermoluminescence ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Published
- 2018
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47. Methodological approach for dating harbor sediments by using luminescence dating—a case study in Ephesus, Western Turkey
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Ludwig Zöller, Helmut Brückner, Anika Symanczyk, Friederike Stock, and Prakrit Noppradit
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Archeology ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Anthropology ,Bulk samples ,Geochemistry ,Period (geology) ,Delta front ,Context (language use) ,Quartz ,Sediment core ,Geology ,Deposition (geology) - Abstract
For this study, a 15-m sediment core from the Roman harbor of Ephesus has been dated with the luminescence technique. 14C age estimates from the same and a neighboring core were used for comparing and validating the luminescence dating results via a single aliquot regenerative dose (SAR) protocol: infrared stimulation of polymineral and blue stimulation of quartz. The results reveal new insights into the deposition of the sediments of the Roman harbor from 2000 BC to AD 1500 approximately. Some samples showed incomplete bleaching. The difference between the polymineral and the quartz techniques described the bleaching condition before burial. When both approaches give consistent ages, complete bleaching can be assumed. Consistent ages were further applied to the Bayesian age-depth model and discussed within the archeological context. Based on the Bayesian age-depth model, a high sedimentation rate of ca. 65 mm/year was calculated for the period of ~ 700–400 BC suggesting a fast advance of the delta front. However, other age estimates suggest a fast advance for the period 200 BC to ca. AD 100. This is probably due to incomplete bleaching of the luminescence samples and the use of bulk samples for 14C for this new study. Comparing the results with nearby cores suggests that dredging was conducted in the southern part of the Roman harbor at a depth of ca. 5 m b.s.l.
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- 2018
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48. Chronology and formation processes of the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic deposits of Ifri n'Ammar using multi-method luminescence dating and micromorphology
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Gerd-Christian Weniger, Nicole Klasen, Helmut Brückner, Abdeslam Mikdad, and Martin Kehl
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010506 paleontology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Sediment ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Feldspar ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Paleontology ,Cave ,law ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Aeolian processes ,Radiocarbon dating ,Quartz ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Chronology - Abstract
The existence of an early Upper Palaeolithic culture at the transition from the Middle Palaeolithic to the Upper Palaeolithic in North African cave sites is currently under debate. We studied Ifri n‘Ammar in North-East Morocco, which is one of the oldest settlement sites of anatomically modern humans (AMH) in the Maghreb and contains several sediment layers which are attributed to Middle and Upper Palaeolithic occupations. In order to investigate processes of sediment accumulation and postdepositional alteration, we studied thin sections from these levels. According to micromorphological analysis, aeolian input considerably contributed to sediment accumulation and postdepositional mixing by bioturbation occurred. We compared multiple and single-grain quartz and multiple-grain feldspar luminescence dating of three samples from corresponding sediment layers to achieve a comprehensive chronology. The single-grain dose distributions scatter strongly and the source of the scatter is unclear. We used an arithmetic mean to calculate the equivalent doses. Archaeological evidence and age control from radiocarbon dating was essential to interpret the data. Quartz and feldspar multiple-grain luminescence ages are between 15 and 80 ka. The central part of the profile shows an intermediate accumulation, which lacks specified lithic artefacts. This supports the idea of an occupational gap between Middle and Upper Palaeolithic layers.
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- 2018
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49. Single-grain feldspar luminescence chronology of historical extreme wave event deposits recorded in a coastal lowland, Pacific coast of central Japan
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Svenja Riedesel, Alastair C. Cunningham, Vanessa M.A. Heyvaert, Toru Tamura, Helen M. Roberts, Georgina E. King, Helmut Brückner, Ed Garrett, Osamu Fujiwara, Christoph Burow, Martin Seeliger, Marc De Batist, Dominik Brill, Anja Zander, and Geoff A. T. Duller
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010506 paleontology ,Tsunami ,Stratigraphy ,Single-grain dating ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Feldspar ,01 natural sciences ,Oceanography ,Low temperature post-IR IRSL ,IRSL50 ,visual_art ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,14. Life underwater ,IRSL ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Chronology - Abstract
The Shirasuka lowlands, located on the Enshu-nada coast of central Japan, record evidence for numerous extreme wave events. Here we test the applicability of using the luminescence signal from feldspars to date these young (130 procedure. We demonstrate that this IRSL50 (pre-IR130) signal results in reliable ages when corrected for fading, and the post-IR IRSL130 stimulation functions as an optical wash for both the natural/regenerated luminescence signal (Lx) and the test dose signal (Tx), lowering the recuperation and removing any remaining charge from previous steps in the protocol. The single grain IRSL50 (pre-IR130) ages generated cover the historical record of the past 800 years and correlate well with past earthquakes and tsunamis in 1361 CE, 1498 CE and 1605 CE. Another identified tsunami deposit may correlate with the 1707 CE earthquake and tsunami. A slope failure deposit, probably caused by the earthquake in 1944 CE, is also identified. This study demonstrates that accurate ages can be determined for the young, extreme wave events at this site using the luminescence signal from feldspars.
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- 2018
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50. Multiple dating approach (14C, 230Th/U and 36Cl) of tsunami-transported reef-top boulders on Bonaire (Leeward Antilles) – Current achievements and challenges
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Helmut Brückner, Max Engel, Tibor Dunai, Andrea Schroeder-Ritzrau, Norbert Frank, Frédéric Boulvain, Silke Mechernich, Jens Fohlmeister, Simon Matthias May, and Gilles Rixhon
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geology ,Context (language use) ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,Surface exposure dating ,Denudation ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Clastic rock ,Subaerial ,Period (geology) ,Reef ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Dating the transport/deposition time of supratidal coarse-clast deposits is difficult, limiting their value for inferring frequency-magnitude patterns of high-energy wave events. On Bonaire (Leeward Antilles, Caribbean), these deposits form prominent landforms, and transport by one or several Holocene tsunamis is assumed at least for the largest clasts. Although a large dataset of 14C and electron spin resonance (ESR) ages is available for major coral rubble ridges and ramparts, it is still debated whether these data reflect the timing of major events, and how these datasets are biased by the reworking of coral fragments. As an attempt to overcome the current challenges for dating the dislocation of singular boulders, three distinct dating methods are implemented and compared: (i) 14C dating of boring bivalves attached to the boulders; (ii) 230Th/U dating of post-depositional, secondary calcite flowstone and subaerial microbialites at the underside of the boulders; and (iii) surface exposure dating of overturned boulders via 36Cl concentration measurements in corals. Approaches (ii) and (iii) have never been applied to coastal boulder deposits so far. The three 14C age estimates are older than 40 ka, i.e. most probably beyond the applicability of the method, which is attributed to post-depositional diagenetic processes, shedding doubt on the usefulness of this method in the local context. The remarkably convergent 230Th/U ages, all pointing to the Late Holocene period (1.0–1.6 ka), are minimum ages for the transport event(s). The microbialite sample yields an age of 1.23 ± 0.23 ka and both flowstone samples are in stratigraphic order: the older (onset of carbonate precipitation) and younger flowstone layers yield ages of 1.59 ± 0.03 and 1.23 ± 0.03 ka, respectively. Four coral samples collected from the topside of overturned boulders yielded similar 36Cl concentration measurements. However, the computed ages are affected by large uncertainties, mostly due to the high natural chlorine concentration. After correction for the inherited component and chemical denudation since platform emergence (inducing additional uncertainty), the calculated 36Cl ages cluster between 2.5 ± 1.3 and 3.0 ± 1.4 ka for three of four boulders whilst the fourth one yields an age of 6.1 ± 1.8 ka, probably related to a higher inheritance. These 230Th/U and 36Cl age estimates are coherent with a suggested tsunami age of
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- 2018
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