Abstract

The Eastern Mediterranean Coastal Plain of Israel is composed mainly of loam, sand and gravel of Pleistocene to Holocene age, indicating an alternation of marine, coastal and continental environments. Owing to the complexity of the numerous exposures of aeolianites (“kurkar”) and soils (“hamra”) in the elongated ridges along the coastal plain, it is difficult to set up a reliable stratigraphy. A systematic luminescence dating study was carried out on loose sand, kurkar and hamra deposits in the coastal plain between Netanya and Haifa. Sixteen samples were taken and investigated from the section at Givat Olga. The chronological results show excellent agreement between the infrared optically stimulated luminescence (IRSL) and thermoluminescence (TL) techniques, indicating that the former sand dunes were well-bleached prior to deposition. The IRSL and TL age estimates range from about 75–3 ka for the aeolianites indicating that this kurkar ridge formed during an older period of the last glaciation, likely before 50 ka.

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