Abstract

A multidisciplinary study covering sedimentology (texture, carbonate and organic matter content, clay mineralogy), geochemistry (major, minor and trace elements, isotopes), palaeoecolgy (ostracods) and isotopic dating ( 14C) has been carried out on two long cores (MB-40.0 m and MIGM-34.0 m) retrieved from the barrier and the alluvial plain margining the Melides lagoon (south-western coast of Portugal). The interpretation of the whole data set allowed the establishment of an evolutionary model for this lowland since the Late Glacial. This model includes four stages. It starts with a fluvial terrestrial environment, replaced by an estuarine to fully marine one (circa 9500 cal BP), due to the rapid rise in sea level recorded during the first phase of the Holocene transgression. The deceleration of sea level rise favoured the emplacement of a sandy barrier (circa 5900 cal BP) that promoted the differentiation of a coastal lagoon which has been progressively filled with fluvial sediments. The ostracod fauna in both locations includes 38 species of littoral to sublittoral/phytal marine forms (mainly Urocythereis britannica, Carinocythereis whitei, Loxoconcha rhomboidea, Pontocythere elongata, Semicytherura sella, Semicytherura acuta, Basslerites cf. berchoni, Hiltermannicythere emaciata) and brackish water forms ( Cyprideis torosa, Loxoconcha elliptica), which clearly characterize the signature of both the marine and lagoonal episodes, respectively.

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