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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Sea level rise in the Mediterranean Sea: High resolution constraints from vermetid reefs

S. SilenziM. CalvoR. ChemelloS. DevotiS. FallonMalcolm Thomas MccullochP. MontagnaJ. TempladoJ. Trotter

subject

Vermetid reef Mediterranean Sea sea-level riseSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia

description

The Mediterranean Sea (MS), is extremely sensitive to rising sea-levels (SL) as attested by drowned archeological remains from the Roman Period [2]. Due to the absence of coral reefs, evidence for recent and Holocene SL change has so far mainly been restricted to coastal cores [1] archeological remains [2] and submerged speleothem deposits. Vermetid reefs are an extremely sensitive high resolution carbonate archive [3,4] and they are mainly formed in the lower intertidal zone by gregarious and sessile gastropods belonging to the genus Dendropoma (family Vermetidae). Since their interval of growth is restricted to the tidal zone, they can be used as precise SL proxies (about ±0.1 m in low range tidal areas).Here, we report new SL data covering two time-windows: between 2,380 and 1,520 years cal BP and during the last 300 yrs. These data have been obtained from two quasi-stable areas of the Western MS: S. Vito Lo Capo (N Sicily, Italy) and Cabo de Gata (SE Spain), opening new perspectives to understand the response of the global changes on this semienclosed basin

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