TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconstruction of Holocene environmental changes in the Kiso-Ibi-Nagara compound river delta, Nobi Plain, central Japan, by diatom analyses of drilling cores
AU - Saegusa, Yoshie
AU - Sugai, Toshihiko
AU - Ogami, Takashi
AU - Kashima, Kaoru
AU - Sasao, Eiji
PY - 2011/1/15
Y1 - 2011/1/15
N2 - Holocene environmental changes were reconstructed by analyzing diatom assemblages from sediment cores YM, KZN, NK, and MC from the Nobi Plain, central Japan. Five diatom assemblage zones were identified: (1) at the beginning of the Holocene, freshwater species were dominant; (2) then, marine and brackish-marine species increased, indicating transgression; (3) in the middle Holocene, proportions of marine and brackish-marine species became almost constant, with marine species dominant; (4) marine species began to be replaced by freshwater species, indicating marine regression as a result of delta progradation; and (5) freshwater species again became dominant. These diatom assemblages correlate with previously defined lithological units: zones 1 and 2 with unit B (fluvial to coastal plain), zone 3 with unit C (inner bay or prodelta), zone 4 mainly with unit D1 (delta front slope), and zone 5 with units D2 (delta front platform) and E (delta plain and flood plain). Although the shoreline migrated landward (transgression) faster than it migrated seaward (regression), transgressive diatom assemblage changes (decrease in marine-brackish water species) took up to 1000 years, whereas regressive changes required only a few hundred years. Diatom analysis is useful for reconstructing not only Holocene sea-level changes and sedimentary environments but also local geographic effects.
AB - Holocene environmental changes were reconstructed by analyzing diatom assemblages from sediment cores YM, KZN, NK, and MC from the Nobi Plain, central Japan. Five diatom assemblage zones were identified: (1) at the beginning of the Holocene, freshwater species were dominant; (2) then, marine and brackish-marine species increased, indicating transgression; (3) in the middle Holocene, proportions of marine and brackish-marine species became almost constant, with marine species dominant; (4) marine species began to be replaced by freshwater species, indicating marine regression as a result of delta progradation; and (5) freshwater species again became dominant. These diatom assemblages correlate with previously defined lithological units: zones 1 and 2 with unit B (fluvial to coastal plain), zone 3 with unit C (inner bay or prodelta), zone 4 mainly with unit D1 (delta front slope), and zone 5 with units D2 (delta front platform) and E (delta plain and flood plain). Although the shoreline migrated landward (transgression) faster than it migrated seaward (regression), transgressive diatom assemblage changes (decrease in marine-brackish water species) took up to 1000 years, whereas regressive changes required only a few hundred years. Diatom analysis is useful for reconstructing not only Holocene sea-level changes and sedimentary environments but also local geographic effects.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.quaint.2009.11.013
DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2009.11.013
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:78650929976
SN - 1040-6182
VL - 230
SP - 67
EP - 77
JO - Quaternary International
JF - Quaternary International
IS - 1-2
ER -