Eight heavy metal concentrations were analyzed from a 60.35-m-long sediment core in the Jiangsu intertidal area, China. Based on the lithofacies characteristics, mean grain size, downcore distributions of elements, and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) 14C and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) data, the sediments in the core were divided into three units that formed during marine isotope stages 4 (MIS 4), MIS 3, and MIS 1. Except for Cd, all the other heavy metals had the lowest average concentrations in U3, which formed during MIS 4 with the coarsest sediment, representing a fluvial deposit. Most of the heavy metals were positively correlated with Al, Fe, and the total organic carbon (TOC), indicating these metals had the same sources. Pearson's correlation coefficient, enrichment factor, geoaccumulation index, and principal component analysis suggested that there was no element enrichment or contamination in the core sediments and that all heavy metals were naturally sourced.