Abstract
A comparative study of the geological structure and evolution of the Curonian and Vistula spits representing large barrier-lagoon systems in the southeastern Baltic Sea reveals some geological and geomorphologic differences against the background of their general similarity. It is shown that morphological structures in the Vistula Spit are smaller. The grain-size analysis of the spit sediments demonstrates that eolian sands constitute all the structures of the spits down to the water level and below it (down to depths of 2 m), except for beaches and low lagoonal terraces. This means that the eolian relief on the maritime plain started forming when the sea level was approximately 4 m below its present-day position. Subsequently, they were growing beyond the wave influence. The sea-level rise resulted in the erosion of the coasts of the spits on both the sea and the lagoon sides and provided an intense landward transport of eolian material.
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