MORPHOLOGICAL AND PALAEOENVIRONMENTAL EVOLUTION OF THE VENDICIO COASTAL PLAIN IN THE HOLOCENE (LATIUM, CENTRAL ITALY)
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Abstract
Morphological and palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Vendicio coastal plain in the Holocene (Latium, Central Italy). (IT
ISSN 0394-3356, 2007).
Morphological, stratigraphical and paleoecological studies carried out along the Vendicio coastal plain (southern Latium) allowed us to
reconstruct the paleoenvironmental evolution of the plain in relation to Holocene sea-level changes.
On the basis of altitude, texture, microfossil and pollen content of sediments recovered in a 20 m borehole carried out on the backshore, three main transitional palaeoenvironments were recognised. Particularly, the 14C dating of a peat layer at the boring base (-16 m a.s.l.), interbedded between sandy silt with organic matter and silty peat levels, gives an age of 7620 ±100 yr BP, equivalent to
8354-8524 cal yr BP. Over these deposits, sands with pebbles, sometimes alternated with silt and sandy silt levels, lay. Microfossil
content, together with sediment features, confirms a transitional sequence from marsh (oligohaline) to lagoon (mesohaline-polyhaline), and finally to marine (littoral) environment, probably due to the last sea ingression related to the mid-Holocene Climatic Optimum peak (~6000 years BP). Pollen analysis reveals the existence of a deciduous forest association, rich in high-humidity demanding elements, by now not represented by a regional modern analogue. The present altitude of the dated peat level, correlated with the available eustatic curves, suggests that the Vendicio sedimentary succession probably has been affected by a slight subsidence phase during MIS 1. The occurrence of a slight subsidence may be also related to late Quaternary vertical displacement of adjacent coastal sectors, and fits in with recent morphological evolutionary models of other minor coastal plains of Latium.
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