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Crustal subsidence rate off Hawaii determined from 234U/238U ages of drowned coral reefs

January 1, 1991

A series of submerged coral reefs off northwestern Hawaii was formed during (largely glacial) intervals when the rate of local sea-level rise was less than the maximum upward growth rate of the reefs. Mass-spectrometric 234U/238U ages for samples from six such reefs range from 17 to 475 ka and indicate that this part of the Hawaiian Ridge has been subsiding at a roughly uniform rate of 2.6 mm/yr for the past 475 ka. The 234U/238U ages are in general agreement with model ages of reef drowning (based on estimates of paleo-sea-level stands derived from oxygen-isotope ratios of deep-sea sediments), but there are disagreements in detail. The high attainable precision (±10 ka or better on samples younger than ∼800 ka), large applicable age range, relative robustness against open-system behavior, and ease of analysis for this technique hold great promise for future applications of dating of 50-1000 ka coral.

Publication Year 1991
Title Crustal subsidence rate off Hawaii determined from 234U/238U ages of drowned coral reefs
DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1991)019<0171:CSROHD>2.3.CO;2
Authors K. R. Ludwig, B. J. Szabo, J. G. Moore, K. R. Simmons
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70016838
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse