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Rapid late Pleistocene/Holocene uplift and coastal evolution of the southern Arabian (Persian) Gulf

December 31, 2012

The coastline along the southern Arabian Gulf between Al Jubail, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and Dubai, UAE, appears to have risen at least 125 m in the last 18,000 years. Dating and topographic surveying of paleo-dunes (43–53 ka), paleo-marine terraces (17–30 ka), and paleo-marine shorelines (3.3–5.5 ka) document a rapid, > 1 mm/a subsidence, followed by a 6 mm/a uplift that is decreasing with time. The mechanism causing this movement remains elusive but may be related to the translation of the coastal area through the backbasin to forebulge hinge line movement of the Arabian plate or, alternatively, by movement of the underlying Infracambrian-age Hormuz salt in response to sea-level changes associated with continental glaciation. Independent of the mechanism, rapid and episodic uplift may impact the design of engineering projects such as nuclear power plants, airports, and artificial islands as well as the interpretation of sedimentation and archeology of the area.

Publication Year 2012
Title Rapid late Pleistocene/Holocene uplift and coastal evolution of the southern Arabian (Persian) Gulf
DOI 10.1016/j.yqres.2011.10.008
Authors Warren W. Wood, Richard M. Bailey, B. A. Hampton, Thomas F. Kraemer, Zhong Lu, David W. Clark, Rhodri H. R. James, Khalid Al Ramadan
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Quaternary Research
Index ID 70227304
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization National Research Program - Eastern Branch