Abstract

ABSTRACT Late Pleistocene and Holocene sedimentation records changes in glacio-eustatic cycles, oceanography, active tectonics, and sediment supply. Here, we use high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles in Te Tai-o-Aorere Tasman Bay to investigate sedimentary deposit distributions associated with sea-level cyclicity over ∼140 ka. We identify nine seismic stratigraphic units below the inner continental shelf, interpret their character based on stratal relationships and acoustic properties, and infer ages using global sea level. The sequence includes stacked deposits and unconformities associated with the shifting shoreline over glacial cycles. Prominent erosional features include a lowstand ravinement surface and two transgressive surfaces formed during sea-level rise following the last two glacial maxima of ∼20 ka and ∼140 ka. The youngest surface marks the base of post-glacial sediment accumulated since ∼12 ka in the study area. Post-glacial sediment includes five seismically mappable units, covering an area of ∼1400 km2 and deposit volume of ∼9 km3. Time-averaged sediment accumulation rates are estimated to range from a maximum of ∼1.6–2.8 m/kyr to ∼0.5–0.9 m/kyr. Sequence stratigraphy interpreted in Te Tai-o-Aorere Tasman Bay is representative of accumulation in a relatively wide-shelf, sheltered inner bay setting supplied by mountainous catchments, and provides stratigraphic context necessary for future stratigraphic and tectonics studies.

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