1. Reconstruction of late Quaternary sea-level change in southwestern British Columbia from sediments in isolation basins.
- Author
-
Hutchinson, Ian, James, Thomas S., Clague, John J., Barrie, J. Vaughn, and Conway, Kim W.
- Subjects
ABSOLUTE sea level change ,MARINE sediments ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,PLEISTOCENE-Holocene boundary ,GLACIAL Epoch ,GEOLOGICAL basins ,GEOLOGY - Abstract
Bracketing ages on marine-freshwater transitions in isolation basins extending from sea level to 100 m elevation on Lasqueti Island, and data from shallow marine cores and outcrops on eastern Vancouver Island, constrain late Pleistocene and Holocene sea-level change in the central Strait of Georgia. Relative sea level fell from 150 m elevation to about -15 m from 14 000 cal. yr BP to 11 500 cal. yr BP. Basins at higher elevations exhibit abrupt changes in diatom assemblages at the marine-freshwater transition. At lower elevations an intervening brackish phase suggests slower rates of uplift. Relative sea level rose to about +1 m about 9000 cal. yr BP to 8500 cal. yr BP, and then slowly fell to the modern datum. The mean rate of glacio-isostatic rebound in the first millennium after deglaciation was about 0.11 m a -1 , similar to the peak rate at the centres of the former Laurentide and Fennoscandian ice complexes. The latter feature smooth, exponential-style declines in sea level up to the present day, whereas in the study area the uplift rate dropped to less than one-tenth of its initial value in only about 2500 years. Slower, more deeply seated isostatic recovery generated residual uplift rates of <0.01 m a -1 in the early Holocene after the late-Pleistocene wasting of the Cordilleran ice sheet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF