INTERPRETATION OF RADIOCARBON DATES FROM THE UPPER SURFACE OF LATE-HOLOCENE PEAT LAYERS IN COASTAL LOWLANDS

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dc.contributor.author Waller M.P.
dc.contributor.author Long A.J.
dc.contributor.author Schofield J.E.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-04-25T03:22:12Z
dc.date.available 2025-04-25T03:22:12Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=11525740
dc.identifier.citation The Holocene, 2006, 16, 1, 51-61
dc.identifier.issn 0959-6836
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/49072
dc.description.abstract Marine/brackish clastic sediments replace freshwater peats in the stratigraphic column of many coastal lowland areas bordering the North Sea during the late Holocene. Radiocarbon dates are routinely used to provide a chronology for this shift. We examine the assumptions underpinning this approach. The results of investigations from 13 sites in the Rye area of Romney Marsh, southeast England, are reported. Dates from apparently gradational contacts of a highly humified, laterally persistent, peat layer range from 3170-2840 cal. yr BP to 1290-1050 cal. yr BP. Multiple inundations or prolonged gradual inundation are nevertheless rejected, as discrete post-peat bodies of sediment are absent and because peat growth appears to have slowed-down or ceased at many sites in advance of inundation. Additionally in the Rye area, sharp contacts are widespread and the pollen assemblages rarely indicate the occurrence of transitional plant communities. A review of the dating evidence from other coastal lowland regions reveals that multiple dating of the upper surface of peat beds invariably produces diachronous results. As a consequence time transgressive processes feature prominently as causal mechanisms underlying this shift. However, many of the dating difficulties recognized in the Rye area appear to apply to other regions. We conclude that radiocarbon dates from the upper surface of peat layers should in most instances only be regarded as limiting ages for the deposition of the overlying clastic sediments. New chronologies need to be built without a priori assumptions as to the underlying processes, ideally through the direct dating of the clastic sediments.
dc.subject LATE HOLOCENE
dc.subject COASTAL CHANGE
dc.subject RADIOCARBON DATING
dc.subject PEAT ACCUMULATION
dc.subject COASTAL LOWLANDS
dc.subject ROMNEY MARSH
dc.subject ENGLAND
dc.subject Holocene
dc.title INTERPRETATION OF RADIOCARBON DATES FROM THE UPPER SURFACE OF LATE-HOLOCENE PEAT LAYERS IN COASTAL LOWLANDS
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1191/0959683606hl895ra
dc.subject.age Cenozoic::Quaternary::Holocene
dc.subject.age Кайнозой::Четвертичная::Голоцен


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