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Article
Potential for timing high-energy marine inundation events in the recent geological past through age-dating of reef boulders in Fiji
Geoscience Letters
  • James P. Terry, Zayed University
  • Samuel Etienne, Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la Diffusion de l'information Géographique
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2014
Abstract

© 2014, Terry and Etienne; licensee Springer. Transported coastal boulders have increasingly come to represent a valuable element of investigations within the broader framework of multi-proxy approaches applied to coastal hazard studies. Through a case study on Taveuni Island in Fiji, this paper outlines some approaches and hindrances to effective timing of prehistorical high-energy marine inundation events (storms and tsunamis) on tropical coastlines from the evidence of reef-platform carbonate boulders. Various sources of errors are outlined that investigators must consider when attempting to use carbonate boulder ages as a surrogate for timing past events. On Taveuni, uranium : thorium dates with a high level of precision (1–7 years) suggest that major inundation events have a return period of approximately 40–45 years since 1650 AD. Of particular importance, considerably different age dates are provided by coral samples sourced from the top and bottom (i.e. opposite faces) of individual boulders, so highlighting interpretation biases that must be avoided.

Publisher
SpringerOpen
Disciplines
Keywords
  • Coastal geomorphology,
  • Coral dating,
  • Marine inundation,
  • Reef boulders,
  • Tropical cyclones,
  • Tsunamis
Scopus ID
85018220846
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Open Access Type
Gold: This publication is openly available in an open access journal/series
Citation Information
James P. Terry and Samuel Etienne. "Potential for timing high-energy marine inundation events in the recent geological past through age-dating of reef boulders in Fiji" Geoscience Letters Vol. 1 Iss. 1 (2014) p. 14 ISSN: <a href="https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/issn/2196-4092" target="_blank">2196-4092</a>
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-terry/6/