Late Holocene sea-level changes in eastern Québec and potential drivers (article)
Barnett, R; Bernatchez, P; Garneau, M; et al.Brain, MJ; Charman, DJ; Stephenson, DB; Haley, S; Sanderson, N
Date: 21 November 2018
Article
Journal
Quaternary Science Reviews
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
Late Holocene sea-level changes can be reconstructed from salt-marsh sediments with decimetre-scale
precision and decadal-scale resolution. These records of relative sea-level changes comprise the net
sea-level contributions from mechanisms that act across local, regional and global scales. Recent
efforts help to constrain the ...
Late Holocene sea-level changes can be reconstructed from salt-marsh sediments with decimetre-scale
precision and decadal-scale resolution. These records of relative sea-level changes comprise the net
sea-level contributions from mechanisms that act across local, regional and global scales. Recent
efforts help to constrain the relative significance of these mechanisms that include sediment dynamics
and isostasy, which cause relative sea-level changes via vertical land motion, ocean-atmosphere
processes that influence regional-scale ocean mass redistribution, and ocean-cryosphere and steric
interactions that drive global scale ocean-volume changes. There remains a paucity of high-resolution
Late Holocene sea-level data from eastern Canada. This precludes an interrogation of the mechanisms
that define sea-level changes over recent centuries and millennia in a region sensitive to oceanic
(Atlantic Multidecadal Variability, Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation), atmospheric (North
Atlantic Oscillation, Arctic Oscillation) and cryospheric (ice-mass balance) changes. We present new
relative sea-level data that span the past three millennia from Baie des Chaleurs in the Gulf of St.
Lawrence generated using salt-marsh foraminifera supported with plant macrofossil analyses. The
accompanying chronology is based on radiocarbon and radionuclide analyses, which are
independently verified using trace metal and microcharcoal records. Relative sea level has risen at a
mean rate of 0.93 ±1.25 mm yr-1 over the past ~1500 years. Residual structure within the
reconstruction (‘internal variability’) has contributed up to an additional 0.61 ±0.46 mm yr-1 of short-lived RSL rise prior to 1800 CE. Following a sea-level low stand during the Little Ice Age,
acceleration in relative sea-level rise is identified between 1800 and 1900 CE within the estimates of
internal variability and from 1950 CE to present in both the secular and residual trends. Phases of
relative sea-level changes in the Gulf of St. Lawrence are concomitant with periods of glacier mass
loss following the Little Ice Age, phase periods of the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Atlantic
Meridional Overturning Circulation and Northern Hemisphere warming. Quantifying the individual
effects of these different mechanisms is important for understanding how ocean-atmosphere processes
redistribute ocean-mass upon larger scale background ocean-volume changes.
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