An accumulation rate in a well-developed mangrove forest has been associated with relative sea-level rise on an island off the coast of Rio de Janeiro State. This rate was calculated by 210Pb dating models from a single sediment core. Results indicate an accumulation rate of approximately 1.7 mm/y for the past approximately 100 years. This rate is almost identical to the ongoing eustatic mean rise in global sea level, indicating a tectonically stable mangrove habitat. Organic C (OC), total N, δ13C(OC), and δ15N values from selected core intervals suggest a constant source of accumulating vegetal debris, dominated by C3-type vegetation with insignificant input of marine-derived organic matter, and a stable subaerial mangal habitat.
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1 March 2008
Recent Sediment Accumulation in a Mangrove Forest and Its Relevance to Local Sea-Level Rise (Ilha Grande, Brazil)
Christian J. Sanders,
Joseph M. Smoak,
A. Sathy Naidu,
Sambasiva R. Patchineelam
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Journal of Coastal Research
Vol. 2008 • No. 242
March 2008
Vol. 2008 • No. 242
March 2008
210Pb geochronology
OC
TN
δ13C(OC)
δ15N