The last deglaciation is characterized by a rapid sea-level rise and coeval abrupt environmental changes. The Barbados coral reef record suggests that this period has been punctuated by two brief intervals of accelerated melting (meltwater pulses, MWP), occurring at 14.08-13.61 ka and 11.4-11.1 ka (calendar years before present), that are superimposed on a smooth and continuous rise of sea level. Although their timing, magnitude, and even existence have been debated, those catastrophic sea-level rises are thought to have induced distinct reef drowning events. The reef response to sea-level and environmental changes during the last deglacial sea-level rise at Tahiti is reconstructed based on a chronological, sedimentological, and paleobiological study of cores drilled through the relict reef features on the modern forereef slopes during the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 310, complemented by results on previous cores drilled through the Papeete reef. Reefs accreted continuously between 16 and 10 ka, mostly through aggradational processes, at growth rates averaging 10 mm yr -1 . No cessation of reef growth, even temporary, has been evidenced during this period at Tahiti. Changes in the composition of coralgal assemblages coincide with abrupt variations in reef growth rates and characterize the response of the upward-growing reef pile to nonmonotonous sea-level rise and coeval environmental changes. The sea-level jump during MWP 1A, 16 ± 2 m of magnitude in ~350 yr, induced the retrogradation of shallow-water coral assemblages, gradual deepening, and incipient reef drowning. The Tahiti reef record does not support the occurrence of an abrupt reef drowning event coinciding with a sea-level pulse of ~15 m, and implies an apparent rise of 40 mm yr -1 during the time interval corresponding to MWP 1B at Barbados.
In 1842 Charles Darwin claimed that vertical growth on a subsiding foundation caused fringing reefs to transform into barrier reefs then atolls. Yet historically no transition between reef types has been discovered and they are widely considered to develop independently from antecedent foundations during glacio-eustatic sea-level rise. Here we reconstruct reef development from cores recovered by IODP Expedition 310 to Tahiti, and show that a fringing reef retreated upslope during postglacial sea-level rise and transformed into a barrier reef when it encountered a Pleistocene reef-flat platform. The reef became stranded on the platform edge, creating a lagoon that isolated it from coastal sediment and facilitated a switch to a faster-growing coral assemblage dominated by acroporids. The switch increased the reef's accretion rate, allowing it to keep pace with rising sea level, and transform into a barrier reef. This retreat mechanism not only links Darwin's reef types, but explains the re-occupation of reefs during Pleistocene glacio-eustacy.
Shallow (<200 m) submarine landslides influence margin evolution and can produce devastating tsunamis, yet little is known about these processes on mixed siliciclasticcarbonate margins. We have discovered seven landslides along the shelf edge and upper slope of the central Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia. The largest shelf edge landslide is investigated in detail and represents a collapse of a 7 km long section of the shelf edge at 90 m water depth with coarse debris deposited up to 5.5 km away on the upper slope down to 250 m. The precise timing and triggering mechanisms are uncertain but available chronologic and seismic stratigraphic evidence suggest this event occurred during the last deglacial sea-level rise between 20 and 14 ka. Regional bathymetric data confirms that these shelf edge and upper slope slides are restricted to the central GBR between latitude 18° and 19°S, suggesting a spatial relationship between the extensive Burdekin paleo-fluvial/delta system and shallow landslide activity. This study highlights an important local mechanism for the generation of tsunamis on this margin type, and numerical simulations under present conditions confirm a 2 to 3 m tsunami wave could be produced locally. However, we consider that the risk of such slides, and their resulting tsunamis, to the modern coastline is negligible due to their relatively small size and the capacity of the GBR to dissipate the wave energy.
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