Modelling Holocene analogues of coastal plain estuaries reveals the magnitude of sea-level threat
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Published:2019-02-25
Issue:1
Volume:9
Page:
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ISSN:2045-2322
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Container-title:Scientific Reports
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Sci Rep
Author:
Helfensdorfer Anna M., Power Hannah E.ORCID, Hubble Thomas C. T.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractHydrodynamic modelling of Australia’s lower Murray River demonstrates the response of a large coastal plain estuary to the mid-Holocene (7,000–6,000 yr BP) sea-level highstand. The approximately two metre higher-than-present sea level during the highstand forced the estuarine limit upstream generating an extensive central basin environment extending more than 200 kilometres from the river mouth (143 kilometres upstream of the modern tidal limit). The geomorphic history of the region does not conform to conventional estuarine facies models as, for much of the Holocene, the lower Murray River acted as a landward, gorge-confined extension of the Murray estuary. The incredibly low relief of this coastal plain system drove significant saline incursion and limited current velocities across the estuary facilitating deposition of a laminated silt-clay sequence which our results suggest may be regionally extensive. Variations to discharge, barrier morphology, or the estuary’s bathymetry result in minimal change to the estuarine palaeo-environment. The shift to the present-day fresher water distribution in the Murray estuary requires a fall in sea level to present-day conditions. The dominance of sea level as the controlling factor on this estuarine palaeo-environment highlights the significant potential impact of climate change induced sea-level rise to coastal plain estuaries.
Funder
Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Multidisciplinary
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1. Discussion of Bourman, R. P., Murray-Wallace, C. V., Wilson, C., Mosley, L., Tibby, J., Ryan, D. D., De Carli, E. D., Tulley, A., Belperio, A. P., Haynes, D., Roberts, A., Westell, C., Barnett, E. J., Dillenburg, S., Beheregaray, L. B., Hesp, P. A. (2022). Holocene freshwater history of the Lower River Murray and its terminal lakes, Alexandrina and Albert, South Australia, and its relevance to contemporary environmental management.Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 69(6), 605–629;Australian Journal of Earth Sciences;2023-02-26 2. Prehistoric pathways to Anthropocene adaptation: Evidence from the Red River Delta, Vietnam;PLOS ONE;2023-02-08 3. The response of wetlands to long-term climate change;Ramsar Wetlands;2023 4. The terminal lakes of the Murray River, Australia, were predominantly fresh before large-scale upstream water abstraction: Evidence from sedimentary diatoms and hydrodynamical modelling;Science of The Total Environment;2022-08 5. Comment on Finlayson;Marine and Freshwater Research;2022-02-07
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