Abstract

Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages of young coastal dune ridges have allowed getting more knowledge on the deposition, erosion and evolution of coastal dune systems in Northern Europe during historical times. However, there is a lack of knowledge of the evolution of the same systems in SW Europe. The studies published in the last years about fossil dunes in NW Spain have allowed the reconstruction of the coastal evolution of this area from the Marine Isotopic Stage (MIS 8) until the Middle Holocene. However, there is still a poor knowledge for the Late Holocene and namely the last centuries. Dating young sediments is challenging due to the low signal to noise ratio of the natural OSL signal and because young samples are very sensitive to thermal transfer or partial bleaching of the luminescence signal during transport. In the last century, erosion and accretion events are better known because remote sensing methods allowed to model some coastal dune systems. However, OSL dating has also been particularly useful in NW Europe to get a better knowledge on the coastal dune evolution. In this work, seven samples from dune ridges and a climbing dune of a coastal system in Playa de Trece (NW Spain) were dated by OSL, as they record the last accretion events occurred in the last two centuries, and above all the 20th Century. For assessing the ages we have compared the results from both parametric central age models and Bayesian statistic using R package BayLum.

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