Abstract

Regional-scale Holocene sea-level reconstruction is the key to understanding natural climatic variability. The tidal flat, salt marsh, and tidal floodplain in the Yangtze River Delta were very sensitive to morphological changes and sea-level variation during the early Holocene. In this study, the lithology, radiocarbon ages, sediment grain size, benthic foraminifera, and ostracods of three new cores were analyzed. Twenty-four sea-level index points were extracted from incised-valley fills beneath the westernmost part of the Yangtze River Delta and used to construct a detailed relative sea-level curve for 11.03–7.25 ka. The relative sea level were − 38.90 ± 3.48 and 1.59 ± 3.28 m at 11.03 and 7.25 ka, respectively, and the average rate of sea-level rise was 10.71 mm/yr. The relative sea level gradually increased at 11.03–10.10 and 9.29–8.33 ka from 4.80 to 13.30 and 3.19 to 19.59 mm/yr, respectively. The rate of relative sea-level rise gradually decreased from 19.59 mm/yr at 8.33 ka to 13.40 mm/yr at 7.82 ka and further decreased to 5.53 mm/yr at 7.25 ka. The Yangtze River Delta recorded accelerations in the rate of sea-level rise from 8.72 to 8.18 ka of 14.2–19.59 mm/yr, corresponding to the pre-8.2 ka event. A comparison of the sea-level histories of the Yangtze River Delta and other regions indicates tectonics, glacial isostatic adjustment, and coastal levering effects caused by the marine inundation of the continental shelves. These new sea-level data contribute to the understanding of the difference in the sea-level rise rate during the early–mid Holocene.

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