Abstract

Paleontological, geochemical, and lithological indicators of former marine and nonmarine influence are correlated between 13 cores from a tidal wetland (Wolfe Glade) on the southeast coast of Delaware Bay. Twenty new radiocarbon dates are used to establish the chronostratigraphy of marsh facies. Sediment iron content, weight loss on ignition, and remains of plants, diatoms and foraminifera (known to tolerate specific tidal inundation cycles) are used to describe cored facies originating from supratidal, intertidal and subtidal salt marsh subenvironments. Pollen assemblages are used to infer local Holocene climate fluctuations and to reconstruct paleoenvironments during marsh evolution. The record of paleoclimatology suggests the Atlantic Chron was warm with variable humidity in the region, whereas the Subboreal was dominated by cool and humid conditions. The Subatlantic was warmer, and initially dryer, with a cool humid phase prior to about 1 ka, returning to warmer, humid conditions in the last several centuries. Local relative sea-level movements are characterized by five rapid, short-term episodes when the rate of sea-level rise accelerated relative to the rate of marsh aggradation. These episodes are recorded by transgressive facies contacts at 5.3 ± 0.2 ka, 4.4 ± 0.2 ka, 3.25 ± 0.2 ka, and 1.8 ± 0.2 ka, sidereal years. An earlier transgressive facies contact dated 6.9 ± 0.2 ka is probably not the product of a true sea-level movement. Sea-level movements are recorded throughout the marsh as palustrine or high marsh peats or peaty overlain by lower intertidal or subtidal marine deposits. Several features suggest that these episodes are local relative transgressions produced by short-term accelerations in the rate of sea-level rise relative to marsh aggradation: the contemporaneity and apparent suddenness of marine inundations: the sequence of facies indicating marine drowning; the presence of similar events in marshes elsewhere in Delaware Bay; and the marsh-wide extent of indicative facies transitions. We propose that the rapid and frequent sea-level movements observed in Wolfe Glade are the result of surges and relaxations in the Gulf Stream (and associated spin-up and partial collapse of the North Atlantic gyre) in response to winds generated by changes in the North Atlantic atmospheric thermal gradient associated with Holocene climate fluctuations.

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