Holocene relative shore-level changes and development of the Ģipka lagoon in the western Gulf of Riga
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30924Date
2023-07-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Rosentau, Alar; Grudzinska, Ieva; Kalińska, Edyta; Alexanderson, Helena; Bērziņš, Valdis; Ceriņa, Aija; Kalniņa, Laimdota; Karušs, Jānis; Lamsters, Kristaps; Muru, Merle; Nartišs, Māris; Paparde, Līga; Hang, TiitAbstract
Holocene relative shore-level changes and development of the G ipka palaeolagoon in the western Gulf of Riga are
reconstructed using multiproxy analyses by combining litho-, biostratigraphical and chronological data with remote
sensing and geophysical data. The results show the development of the G ipka basin from the Ancylus Lake/Initial
Litorina Sea coastal zone (before c. 9.1 cal. ka BP) to coastal fen (c. 9.1 to 8.4 cal. ka BP) and gradual development of
the Litorina Sea lagoon (c. 8.4 to 4.8 cal. ka BP) and its transition to a freshwater coastal lake (c. 4.8 to 4.6 cal. ka BP),
fen (c. 4.6 to 4.2 cal. ka BP), and river floodplain (since c. 4.2 cal. ka BP). The highest shorelines of the Ancylus Lake
and Litorina Sea were mapped at an elevation of 12–11 and 9 m a.s.l., respectively. A new relative shore level (RSL)
curve for the western Gulf of Riga was constructed based on RSL data from the G ipka area and from nearby Ruhnu
Island studied earlier. The reconstruction shows that the beginning of the lastmarine transgressionin the western Gulf
of Riga started at c. 8.4 cal. ka BP, and concurred with the 1.9 m RSL rise event recorded from the North Sea basin.
Diatom analysis results indicate the existence of the G ipka lagoon between c. 7.7 and 4.8 cal. ka BP, with the highest
salinityc. 6.1 cal. ka BP. During the existence of the brackish lagoon, settlement sites of the Neolithic hunter–gatherer
groups existed on the shores of the lagoon in the period c. 6.0 to 5.0 cal. ka BP.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Rosentau, Grudzinska, Kalińska, Alexanderson, Bērziņš, Ceriņa, Kalniņa, Karušs, Lamsters, Muru, Nartišs, Paparde, Hang. Holocene relative shore-level changes and development of the Ģipka lagoon in the western Gulf of Riga. Boreas. 2023Metadata
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