• Title of article

    Holocene sea-level change in Sicily and its implications for tectonic models: new data from the Taormina area, northeast Sicily

  • Author/Authors

    Antonioli، نويسنده , , Fabrizio and Kershaw، نويسنده , , Steve and Rust، نويسنده , , Derek and Verrubbi، نويسنده , , Vladimiro، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    19
  • From page
    53
  • To page
    71
  • Abstract
    The northeast coast of Sicily shows emergent marine features that have been uplifting during the Holocene along the footwalls of two major regional fault systems, the Malta Escarpment and Messina fault system. Previously, uplift rates were interpreted as up to about 1.8 mm/mm a−1. New dates on shelly remains, collected close to sea-level, from the Taormina area north of Mount Etna, and amended sea-level curves, are used to show that uplift over the past 6000 years has been proceeding at a slower rate of about 1.4 mm a−1. However, over a longer time period, from the Tyrrhenian Oxygen Isotope Stage 5.5 (about 125 ka) to the present day, the uplift rate has been yet slower, at about 1 mm a−1. Northeast Sicily lies in a complex plate boundary region whereas, in contrast, the rest of Sicily appears to have been stable throughout the later Quaternary. Further comparisons show that the French Mediterranean coast [Lambeck, Bard (2000) Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 175, 202–222] is a region of crustal stability, where movement is dominated by subsidence of the outer portion of the proglacial forebulge of the last glaciation. There the coastline has been progressively submerged during the Holocene, and sea level has never been higher than at present. Northeastern Sicily uplift is therefore more likely controlled by plate processes that mask most of the effects of glacio-hydro-isostatic adjustment.
  • Keywords
    Holocene , sea-level change , Taormina , Sicily , uplift , Quaternary
  • Journal title
    Marine Geology
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Marine Geology
  • Record number

    2259802