Abstract

Tasmania and the Bass Strait islands (King and Flinders) preserve a widespread but fragmentary Quaternary coastal record. Quaternary coastal sediments occur in a range of morphostratigraphic settings, typically contain well‐preserved and diverse molluscan fossil assemblages of shallow water origin, and provide evidence for varying degrees of neotectonic uplift over contrasting temporal and spatial scales. Holocene and Late Pleistocene (last interglacial) coastal strata occur most extensively in this region, as revealed by amino acid racemization, electron spin resonance and radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon dates for marine molluscs from Holocene coastal strata range between 790 to 7120 a and relate specifically to the interval since the culmination of the post‐glacial marine transgression. Holocene coastal sediments in this region do not provide convincing evidence for a higher sea level during the last 7000 years. The last interglacial coastal sediments in Tasmania represent the highest topographic occurr...

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