Abstract
AbstractWe integrate 10 new with five published 40Ar/39Ar age determinations, both on primary volcanic deposits and on detrital sanidine, which provide precise geochronologic control on the Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5.5 and MIS 5.3 sea‐level indicators that occur at three coastal caves in a tectonically stable region of the central Tyrrhenian Sea of Italy. The age of a Strombus‐bearing bioclastic conglomerate, associated with a tidal notch occurring at 9.5 m a.s.l. at Cape Circeo, is constrained to between 121.5 ± 5.8 and 116.2 ± 1.2 ka. Moreover, backbeach deposits intercalated in the sedimentary filling of Guattari and Capre coastal caves are directly correlated with a tidal notch at ∼2.5 m associated with another bioclastic conglomerate at Cape Circeo and dated to 110.4 ± 1.4–104.9 ± 0.9 ka. The latter deposit is also correlated with the adjacent marine terrace, occurring at 3–5 m on the coast between Capes Circeo and Anzio, for which a maximum age of 100.7 ± 6.6 ka was previously reported. These data provide evidence for a maximum sea level around 9.5 m above the present sea level and a duration of MIS 5.5 highstand until 116 ka, in agreement with estimates from other regions in the world. In contrast, they suggest a maximum sea level during MIS 5.3 highstand that is similar to the present level, and only ∼7 m lower than the MIS 5.5 highstand, challenging the reconstructions of the MIS 5 ice‐sheet volumes and derived global sea levels that are based on benthic oxygen isotope records.
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