Abstract

The mid-late Holocene drop in relative sea level has resulted in the deposition and progradation of coastal facies along the Enjefa Beach in Kuwait, NW Arabian Gulf. These coastal facies display various depositional subenvironments, including landward foreshore beach, tidal channel, shallow tidal channel, and coastal sand flat. The foreshore beach facies consist of dominantly planar laminated beds. Main tidal channel subenvironments are interpreted for the trough cross-bedded facies. The shallow tidal channel deposits are composed of variable oriented planar wedge-shaped and ripple cross-bedded facies. The coastal sand flat deposits consist of extensively burrowed beds with a large network of Ophiomorpha burrows. These exposures are overlain by the recent continental deposits of rubbles and artificial infill. The mere exposed occurrence of these rocks as well as the above facies stacking pattern reflects progradation as a result of relative drop in sea level. Based on the carbon dating of these sediments, the last phase of the relative sea level drop likely occurred around 1,800 years ago. Neotectonics of local structuring, due to the regional northeastward movement of the Arabian Plate under the Zagros Fold Belt, might have a role in this sea receding

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