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Lithological anomalies in a relict coastal dune : geophysical and paleoenvironmental markers
Authors
Albertas Bitinas
Bagnold
+37 more
Barnhardt
Bitinas
Borówka
Botha
Bristow
Buynevich
Buynevich
Bučas
Carter
Clarke
Clarke
Clemmensen
Donatas Pupienis
Fillon
Guha
Havholm
Hesp
Ilya V. Buynevich
Jol
Jol
Kattaa
Klijn
Komar
Lancaster
Moe
Pye
Sauermann
Schenk
Seppälä
Sevink
Shankar
Sridhar
van Dam
van Dam
van Heteren
Wilson
Žilinskas
Publication date
11 May 2007
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Research Letters 34 (2007): L09707, doi:10.1029/2007GL029767.Ground exposures of migration surfaces (slipfaces) of a relict Holocene coastal dune along the southeastern Baltic Sea coast provide an ideal opportunity for establishing the causes of prominent reflections on geophysical profiles. High-amplitude reflections on high-resolution ground-penetrating radar (GPR) images correlate well with two major lithological anomalies: 1) paleosols developed on dune slipfaces, and 2) slipfaces consisting of heavy-mineral concentrations (HMCs). Paleosols serve as indicators of dune stability, represent datable chronostratigraphic surfaces, and help reconstruct dune paleo-morphology. HMCs have substantially higher magnetic susceptibility values than background quartz-rich sands and, where they are well-developed, can be also used for spatial correlation. Based on their occurrence at the study site, these enriched horizons likely represent periods of increased wind activity (storminess). Multiple HMCs upwind of paleosol P1 (800–670 cal years BP) likely reflect periods of intensified wind activity along the southeast Baltic region during the Medieval Warm Period.This research was funded by the Ocean and Climate Change Institute and The J. Lamar Worzel Assistant Scientist Fund of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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