TY - JOUR
T1 - The Holocene Environmental Evolution of the Inner Hangzhou Bay and Its Significance
AU - Liu, Yan
AU - Ma, Chunyan
AU - Fan, Daidu
AU - Sun, Qianli
AU - Chen, Jing
AU - Li, Maotian
AU - Chen, Zhongyuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Science Press, Ocean University of China and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2018/12/1
Y1 - 2018/12/1
N2 - The Holocene environmental evolution in coastal area, including deltas and estuaries, is vital to the Neolithic colonization in the eastern China. A 29-m long sediment core XL was obtained from the region between the Taihu Lake and Qiantang Estuary, and multiple analyses on the core sediments have been done to investigate the evolution history of the inner coastal zone of Hangzhou Bay during the Holocene. Six sedimentary facies are identified since the late Pleistocene, including the paleosol at the bottom, overlain by tidal-flat-channel complex (TFC), tidal-distributary-channel (TDC), inner estuarine basin (IEB), subtidal-to-intertidal-flat, and fluvial-plain facies. The TFC and TDC facies are dated to be formed before 8500 cal yr BP, featured by relatively coarse sediments, high magnetic properties and less abundant foraminifera, denoting the tide-influenced setting with large terrestrial inputs. The IEB facies characterized by the most abundant foraminifera fossils and the lowest sediment magnetic properties, is inferred to be deposited during the maximum flooding period between 8500 and 7900 cal yr BP. The branch estuary was then infilled by local sediments with a shallowing-upward subtidal-to-intertidal sequence during 7900–4300 cal yr BP. At last the fluvial plain system developed since no later than 4300 cal yr BP, favouring the rapid development of Neolithic cultures in the region.
AB - The Holocene environmental evolution in coastal area, including deltas and estuaries, is vital to the Neolithic colonization in the eastern China. A 29-m long sediment core XL was obtained from the region between the Taihu Lake and Qiantang Estuary, and multiple analyses on the core sediments have been done to investigate the evolution history of the inner coastal zone of Hangzhou Bay during the Holocene. Six sedimentary facies are identified since the late Pleistocene, including the paleosol at the bottom, overlain by tidal-flat-channel complex (TFC), tidal-distributary-channel (TDC), inner estuarine basin (IEB), subtidal-to-intertidal-flat, and fluvial-plain facies. The TFC and TDC facies are dated to be formed before 8500 cal yr BP, featured by relatively coarse sediments, high magnetic properties and less abundant foraminifera, denoting the tide-influenced setting with large terrestrial inputs. The IEB facies characterized by the most abundant foraminifera fossils and the lowest sediment magnetic properties, is inferred to be deposited during the maximum flooding period between 8500 and 7900 cal yr BP. The branch estuary was then infilled by local sediments with a shallowing-upward subtidal-to-intertidal sequence during 7900–4300 cal yr BP. At last the fluvial plain system developed since no later than 4300 cal yr BP, favouring the rapid development of Neolithic cultures in the region.
KW - Hangzhou Bay
KW - Neolithic cultures
KW - environmental magnetism
KW - facies analysis
KW - foraminifera
KW - grain size
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85056271382
U2 - 10.1007/s11802-018-3562-2
DO - 10.1007/s11802-018-3562-2
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85056271382
SN - 1672-5182
VL - 17
SP - 1301
EP - 1308
JO - Journal of Ocean University of China
JF - Journal of Ocean University of China
IS - 6
ER -