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  3. Seismic stratigraphy of the Blue Hole (Lighthouse Reef, Belize), a late Holocene climate and storm archive
 

Seismic stratigraphy of the Blue Hole (Lighthouse Reef, Belize), a late Holocene climate and storm archive

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.45609
Date of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Geologie...

Author
Gischler, Eberhard
Anselmetti, Flavioorcid-logo
Institut für Geologie
Shinn, Eugene A.
Subject(s)

500 - Science::550 - ...

Series
Marine Geology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0025-3227
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.margeo.2013.07.013
Description
Five seismic units may be identified in the similar to 8 m thick Holocene sediment package at the bottom of the Blue Hole, a 120 m deep sinkhole located in the atoll lagoon of Lighthouse Reef, Belize. These units may be correlated with the succession of an existing 5.85-m-long sediment core that reaches back to 1385 kyrs BP. The identification of seismic units is based on the fact that uniform, fine-grained background sediments show weak reflections while alternating background and coarser-grained event (storm) beds exhibit strong reflections in the seismic profiles. The main source of sediments is the marginal atoll reef and adjacent lagoon area to the east and north. Northeasterly winds and storms transport sediment into the Blue Hole, as seen in the eastward increase in sediment thickness, i.e., the eastward shallowing of the Blue Hole. Previous assumptions of much thicker Holocene sediment packages in the Blue Hole could not be confirmed. So far, close to 6-m-long cores were retrieved from the Blue Hole but the base of the sedimentary succession remains to be recovered. The nature of the basal sediments is unknown but mid-Holocene and possibly older, Pleistocene sinkhole deposits can be expected. The number of event beds identified in the Blue Hole (n = 37) during a 1.385 kyr-long period and the number of cyclones listed in historical databases suggest that only strong hurricanes (categories 4 and 5) left event beds in the Blue Hole sedimentary succession. Storm beds are numerous during 13-0.9 kyrs BP and 0.8-0.5 kyrs BP.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/117443
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anselmetti_gischler.pdftextAdobe PDF2.2 MBpublished
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