Late Quaternary Relative Sea-Level Changes at Mid-Latitudes

Publication type

Book Chapter

Abstract

Relative sea-level (RSL) reconstructions from mid-latitude regions reveal spatial and temporal variations since the Last Glacial Maximum. On passive margins in North America and Europe, RSL fell by over 100 m in areas that were covered by major ice sheets because of isostatic rebound. In contrast, RSL reconstructions from regions peripheral to ice sheets exhibited variable rates of sea-level rise due to the balance among postglacial isostatic recovery, proglacial forebulge collapse, and hydro-isostatic loading. Southern Hemisphere RSL reconstructions from mid-latitudes recorded a mid-Holocene highstand of variable magnitude and timing. A common feature of reconstructions for the last 2000 years is an increase in modern rates of RSL rise that was likely initiated at the end of the nineteenth or early twentieth century.

Keywords

Australasia, Europe, late Holocene, Late quaternary, Mid-latitude, North America, Relative sea level, South Africa, South America

Publication Details

Book Title

Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science (Second Edition)

Pagination

489-494

Publisher Information

Publisher

Elsevier

City

Amsterdam

Subscribe to the EOS Newsletter

Stay in touch with the latest news, events, research, and publications from the Earth Observatory of Singapore.

Email is required

Email is wrong format

You Can Make a Difference

Partner with us to make an impact and create safer, more sustainable societies throughout Southeast Asia.
Make A Gift