Abstract

Unravelling patterns of relative sea-level change during previous interglacials enhances our understanding of ice sheet response to changing climate. Temperate-latitude estuarine environments have the potential to preserve continuous records of relative sea level from previous interglacial (warm) periods. This is important because, currently, we typically only have snapshots of sea-level highstands from low-latitude corals and raised palaeoshoreline indicators while the (continuous) deep-sea oxygen isotope record only provides indirect evidence of sea-level changes. Here, we focus on the Nar Valley in eastern England, in which is preserved evidence of a late middle-Pleistocene marine transgression more than 20 vertical metres in extent. By applying a model of coastal succession and sea-level tendencies, as used in Holocene sea-level studies, we assess the mode (abrupt versus gradual) of sea-level change recorded by the interglacial Nar Valley sequences. Compiled palaeo-stratigraphic evidence comprising foraminifera, pollen and amino acid racemization dating, suggests that the mode of sea-level change in the Nar Valley interglacial sequence was gradual, with potentially two phases of regional transgression and relative sea-level rise occurring at two separate times. The first phase occurred during the latter part of marine Oxygen Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 from ∼8 to 18 m OD; and, the second phase potentially occurred during early MIS 9 from ∼-3 to 3 m OD (with long-term tectonic uplift included in these estimates). We cannot conclusively preclude an alternative MIS 11 age for these lower sediments. The lack of indicators for rapid sea-level oscillations in the Nar Valley adds weight to an argument for steady melt of the ice sheets during both MIS 11 and 9.

Highlights

  • To achieve an improved understanding of the relationship between climate, ice-sheet behaviour and sea level, we need to examine geological archives

  • By applying methodological insight gained from Holocene sea-level reconstructions in estuarine settings, similar to that discussed by Long et al (2015), this paper aims to assess the mode of sea-level change during the interglacial Nar Valley record, which we demonstrate as recording marine inundation during marine Oxygen Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 and 9

  • Despite extensive coring using a hand gouge and auger at a number of test sites in the modern elevation range between the lower and upper sites, we found no evidence of sediments resembling the Nar Valley Clay or Nar Valley Freshwater Beds between þ4 and þ 8 metres Ordnance Datum (m OD), typically encountering bedrock Carstone under the shallow Holocene/Lateglacial substrate

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Summary

Introduction

To achieve an improved understanding of the relationship between climate, ice-sheet behaviour and sea level, we need to examine geological archives. Previous interglacials are often used to assess changes in past sea level during warm-climate episodes. N.L.M. Barlow et al / Quaternary Science Reviews 173 (2017) 20e39 complete records, whereas the peripheries of ice sheets are the regions where mass is potentially lost during interglacial warming. MIS 11 is the longest interglacial of the late Quaternary (27 ka, Tzedakis et al, 2012) with global atmospheric CO2 at 286 ppm, and is considered a potential analogue of the current interglacial due to similarities in orbital configuration (McManus et al, 2013). MIS 9, comparatively short in duration (11.6 ka), is the warmest interglacial recorded in Antarctica, with global atmospheric CO2 at 300 ppm (Past Interglacials working group of PAGES, 2016). MIS 9, comparatively short in duration (11.6 ka), is the warmest interglacial recorded in Antarctica, with global atmospheric CO2 at 300 ppm (Past Interglacials working group of PAGES, 2016). Yin and Berger (2012) demonstrate that MIS 11c, MIS 9e and MIS 5e are the warmest interglacials of the last 800,000 years

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