Coral Reef Island Initiation and Development Under Higher Than Present Sea Levels
East, H; Perry, C; Kench, P; et al.Liang, Y; Gulliver, P
Date: 10 October 2018
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU) / Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Coral reef islands are considered to be among the most vulnerable environments to future
sea-level rise. However, emerging data suggest that different island types, in contrasting
locations, have formed under different conditions in relation to past sea level. Uniform
assumptions about reef island futures under sea-level rise may ...
Coral reef islands are considered to be among the most vulnerable environments to future
sea-level rise. However, emerging data suggest that different island types, in contrasting
locations, have formed under different conditions in relation to past sea level. Uniform
assumptions about reef island futures under sea-level rise may thus be inappropriate. Using
chronostratigraphic analysis from atoll rim islands (sand- and gravel-based) in the southern
Maldives, we show that whilst island building initiated at different times around the atoll (~2,800
cal. yr. B.P. and ~4,200 cal. yr. B.P. at windward and leeward rim sites respectively), higher than
present sea levels and associated high-energy wave events were actually critical to island
initiation. Findings thus suggest that projected sea-level rise and increases in the magnitude of
distal high-energy wave events could reactivate this process regime which, if there is an
appropriate sediment supply, may facilitate further vertical reef island-building.
Geography - old structure
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