Abstract

Tsunami, storm and flood events are destructive agents that have the potential to cause much damage and cost lives. The coastal regions around the north-western Arabian Sea are prone to these natural disasters with recent events including the storm and flood of AD 1842, the Makran tsunami of 1945, and Cyclone Gonu in 2007. Despite their severity, the paucity of reliable historical records does not allow us to answer pertinent questions concerning their frequency, intensity and impact. Palaeo-event analysis from the geological record allows us to extend, and test, the historical record. Here we have dated and examined a 92 cm long sediment core from the tectonically active, cyclone and storm prone Chabahar Bay area (southern Iran). Our appraisal directly tests conventional proxies for identifying abrupt events (e.g. grain-size, geochemical data), which we supplement with a novel palynological (pollen and dinocyst) approach. Both sedimentological and palynological approaches suggest a large event which was dated at < AD 1808 ± 41, whereas geochemical approaches remain inconclusive. The increase of continentally derived pollen (Pinaceae, Salix, Betula and Typha–Sparganium), increases in Brigantedinium sp. and S. ramosus as well as decreases in Lingulodinium machaerophorum suggest enhanced fluvial delivery in association with a flood. This investigation provides evidence of a major flash-flood affecting the Chabahar Bay region at < AD 1808 ± 41 which we infer is the geological expression of the storm and associated flash flood of AD 1842. Moreover, our study demonstrates the utility of palynology in identifying and understanding the causes of abrupt events to complement more widely applied techniques.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call