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Published July 1993 | public
Journal Article

High-precision U-series dating of Last Interglacial events by mass spectrometry: Houtman Abrolhos Islands, western Australia

Abstract

The Houtman Abrolhos Islands, situated at the western passive margin of the Australian continent, consist of a series of shelf-edge coral reefs. The central platforms of the reefs are Late Pleistocene in age and are generally some 3–5 m above present sea level. The uppermost part of the Last Interglacial reefs normally has an upward-shallowing sequence, consisting of coral framestone, coralline algal bindstone and skeletal grainstone to rudstone. This sequence represents deposition in water depths of less than 2 m, and provides a good indicator of sea level. High-precision mass-spectrometric dates of corals from the Abrolhos reefs, including dates obtained from drill cores, arological, isotopic and stratigraphic criteria are established for the selection of suitable samples for dating and for assessing the reliability of dates. Using the screened dates and the stratigraphic evidence, the timing and character of the sea level variations of the Last Interglacial in the Abrolhos region are examined. The data show that sea level of the Last Interglacial in the Abrolhos was 4 m below its present height by ca. 134 ka BP and probably reached about 2 m above present height at ca. 133 ka BP. The exact time at which sea level reached its peak (6 m above present sea level) cannot be determined from our data. But it is clear that the sea level high stand of the Last Interglacial lasted until ca. 116 ka BP and that for much of the Last Interglacial sea level at the Abrolhos was at a height of about 4 m above its present level.

Additional Information

© 1993 Elsevier Science Publishers B.V. Received November 11, 1992; revision accepted May 8, 1993. We thank E. Wallensky and D. Kelleher (Department of Biogeography and Geomorphology, Australian National University) for drilling assistance; L.M. Marsh (Western Australian Museum) for coral identification and the Fisheries Department of Western Australia (particularly R. Owens) for field support. K.-H. Wyrwoll thanks G.W. Kendrick for tuition on matters marine over many years and J. Glover for his grammatical wizardry. The reviewers, Ed Boyle, James Rubenstone and an anonymous reviewer, and the editor, M. Kastner, are thanked for constructive criticisms of the manuscript. Zhu, Wyrwoll and Collins were supported by a grant from the Australian Research Council. Chen, Wasserburg and Eisenhauer were supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF OCE 90-18534). Eisenhauer was also partly supported by the "Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Ei272/1-1". Caltech contribution numbers: Division Contribution #5152 (776).

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023