Abstract

Extensive patches of fossil shell deposits are found in many places along the rims of emerged coastal embayments and lagoon floors on the southern coast of Sri Lanka. Compositional and depositional sequences of fossil shells (Veneridae, Cerithidae, and Nassaridae) reveal that the bulk of the valves has been accumulated by three processes: (a) the shells have been piled up on the rims of emerged coastal embayments mainly by wave action; (b) following coastal progradation since the late Subboreal the shells possibly gathered on lagoon floors; and (c) the valves on the coastal hilly areas and dune areas were discarded by early human inhabitants in the course of their daily activities. Radiocarbon dates of fossil corals along the southwest and south coasts support this interpretation and indicate that mean sea level was at least 1 m higher than present in the middle Holocene. The fossil species may have lived in an intertidal zone of embayments and lagoons that extended 3 km or more inland form the present shore in the middle Holocene.

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