Abstract

Radiocarbon ages from contemporaneous samples of varying types can show large age differences (Nakamura et al., 2016; Raymond and Bauer, 2001), and changes in offsets between these ages (δage) within a core have been scarcely examined. Changes in δage have previously suggested disturbances or shifts to the depositional setting (Nakamura et al., 2016; Ishiwa et al., 2021; Yokoyama et al., 2019). Radiocarbon dating of ocean sediment cores from near Ube City, Yamaguchi prefecture, Japan revealed periods of slower and rapid sedimentation which aligned with, respectively, post-Holocene High Stand (HHS, ∼7–4 cal ka BP (Yokoyama, 2021)) conditions and sea level fall, and pre-HHS conditions with rising sea levels.δage patterns implied that the reliability of sample types as depositional age indicators may depend on the depositional environment. Radiocarbon ages and relative sea level (RSL) curves suggested that local inundation may have occurred up to ∼ 200 years earlier than previously reported. In addition to constraining the relative timing of sea transgression and regression during the HHS, this study highlights the need to examine the depositional setting to accurately represent depositional ages.

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