Abstract
Aiming to gain a better understanding of the response of sediment-starved coastal systems to the climate-driven sea level change, this study examines the Holocene evolution history of Qing'ao Embayment, southern China, as a case study. Results suggest three distinct stages of the evolution history: Stage 1 (8400–6000 cal yr BP) records an initial sedimentation phase associated with the early Holocene marine transgression into the embayment. Stage 2 (6000–3000 cal yr BP) records early sediment deposition under relatively strong hydrodynamic inshore/open-bay environment during early marine regression. Stage 3 (3000 cal yr BP to present) records two substages: Stage 3a relates to the semi-enclosed bay, intertidal and lagoonal salt marsh facies between 3000 and 1300 cal yr BP, and Stage 3b records the final infilling of the embayment into a lagoonal plain. This evolution model suggests that the rates of sea level change and sediment accretion are the two major controlling factors for the Holocene geomorphological evolution of sediment-starving coastal systems.Comparison of the evolution of Qing'ao embayment with sediment-supply rich large-river estuary/deltas reveals unique features in the response to Holocene sea level change of this sediment-starved embayment: During the early Holocene marine transgression, sediment starts to accumulate in the small embayment around 8400 cal yr BP, hundreds of years later than in large river estuaries. During 8400–6000 cal yr BP, sediment accretion rate remains dramatically lower than sea level rise rate, which results in the quick growth of sediment accommodation space during this stage. Around 6000 cal yr BP, though sea level has remained relatively stable and large-river deltas have been growing for about 1000 years, the sediment-starved embayment was still under shallow marine and/or open bay conditions. At 3000 cal yr BP, shoreline started to prograde in sediment-starved embayment, which is about 3000 years later than large river deltas. Finally, agricultural activity started around 1300 cal yr BP in the embayment, thousands of years later than large river deltas. Limited or minimal fluvial sediment supply to the small embayment has constrained the land expansion during the sea level stabilization since mid-Holocene, and the limited living space might result in the much later agricultural activity in such coastal system.Due to the different balances between sea level change and sediment flux, sediment-starved coasts are expected to be under higher risks than large river deltas. However, earlier and more extensive human activities in large river basins have resulted in the reduction of sediment discharge that heighten the risks of large river deltas against future sea level rise. Thus, more attention should be paid to the coastal sediment supply budgets in the context of the background of rising sea level.
Published Version
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