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Coastal Response to Changes in Sea Level Since the Last 4500 BP On the East Coast of Tamil Nadu, India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2016

Hema Achyuthan
Affiliation:
Centre for Geoscience and Engineering, Anna University, Tamil Nadu, India. Email: [email protected].
V R Baker
Affiliation:
Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, 85721, USA
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Abstract

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Geomorphology, clay mineral composition, and radiocarbon dates from Muttukadu to Marakkanam estuaries and the tidal zone along the east coast of Tamil Nadu, India, have been used to reconstruct coastal evolution between approximately 4500 and 1100 B P. Formation of alternate oyster beds with intervening tidal clay units indicate fluctuation in the sea level may be a consequence of changes in the Mid-Holocene sedimentation pattern and coastal configuration. 14C dates from Muttukadu indicate a rapid relative sea-level rise (RSL) subsequent to 3500 BP and tidal flat sedimentation between 3475 and 3145 BP. Marine conditions along the east coast area returned around 1900 B P. Comparison of dates with other sites, e.g. Muttukadu, Mammallapuram, and Marakkanam, points toward short removal of marine conditions, ample sediment supplies in the tidal zones, and neotectonic activity. Reactivation of the north–south trending fault line occurred not earlier than approximately 1050 B P. Our study indicates that Middle to Late Holocene coastal sedimentation and the chronology of the tidal zone formation have been strongly influenced by local factors. These have provided considerable scope for internal reorganization with changing coastal processes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2002 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona 

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