The relative utility of foraminifera and diatoms for reconstructing late Holocene sea-level change in North Carolina, USA.

Publication type

Journal Article

Abstract

Foraminifera and diatoms preserved in salt-marsh sediments have been used to produce high-resolution records of Holocene relative sea-level (RSL) change. To determine which of these microfossil groups is most appropriate for this purpose we investigated their relative utility from salt marshes in North Carolina, USA. Regional-scale transfer functions were developed using foraminifera, diatoms and a combination of both (multi-proxy) from three salt marshes (Oregon Inlet, Currituck Barrier Island and Pea Island). We evaluated each approach on the basis of transfer-function performance. Foraminifera, diatoms and multi-proxy-based transfer functions all demonstrated a strong relationship between observed and predicted elevations (r2jack > 0.74 and RMSEP 

Keywords

Diatoms, Foraminifera, North Carolina, Sea level, Transfer function

Publication Details

Journal

Quaternary Research

Volume

71

Issue

1

Pagination

9-21

Date Published

01/2009

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