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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Liviu Giosan

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Publications
»Black Sea Flood
»Tempestuous highs and lows in the Gulf of Mexico
»Holocene erosion of the Lesser Himalaya
»Sea of Marmara's Reconnection to Ocean
»Evolution of Matagorda and Lavaca estuary
»Survive or subside?
»Indus River
»Plan-view asymmetry in wave-influenced deltas
»Review: The Black Sea Flood Question
»North Atlantic Oscillation and Danube Delta Shoreline
»Morphodynamic feedbacks on deltaic coasts
»Danube Delta Documents Stable Black Sea Level
»Morphodynamics of the Indus delta
»Deltaic Environments
»River Deltas: Concepts, Models, Case Studies
»Delta Morphodynamics: Danube delta
»Physical oceanography of a Black Sea flood
»Drilling Aegean, Marmara, Black Seas
»Asymmetric wave influenced deltas
»Paleoceanography from sediment color I
»Paleoceanography from sediment color II
»Migration history of abyssal mudwave
»Ages for sediment drifts in western N Atlantic
»Carbonate content from diffuse reflectance
»Sediment transport on Danube delta coast
»Sediment dynamics on Danube delta coast



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Giosan, L., J.P. Donnelly, E. Vespremeanu, S. Constantinescu, F. Filip, I. Ovejanu, A. Vespremeanu-Stroe, G.A.T. Duller , Young Danube Delta Documents Stable Black Sea Level Since Middle Holocene: Morphodynamic, Paleogeographic, Archaeological Implications , Geology, 2006

New radiocarbon and optical dates show that the Holocene Danube delta started to build out of a Black Sea embayment ~5200 yr ago. Delta lobe development phases differ by as much as 5 k.y. from previously proposed ages. The new chronology allows for a better understanding of the Danube delta paleogeography, including the demise of Istria, the main ancient Greek-Roman city in the region.

Prior reconstructions of sea level in the Black Sea inferred fluctuations to 15 m in range; however, stratigraphy of beach ridges in the delta shows that the relative Black Sea level for the past 5 k.y. was stable in the Danube delta region within ~2 m and ~1.5 m of the current level. Hydroisostatic effects related to a proposed catastrophic reconnection of the Black Sea to the World Ocean in the early Holocene may have been responsible for the sea level reaching the highstand earlier than estimated by models.

The new sea-level data suggest that submergence at several ancient settlements around the Black Sea may be better explained by local factors such as subsidence rather than by basin-wide sea-level fluctuations.

FILE » Giosan&al2006



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