Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale-OGS, Trieste, Italy.
Dipartimento di Scienze Pure e Applicate, Urbino University ''Carlo Bo'', Urbino, Italy.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 3;15(2):e0228087. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228087. eCollection 2020.
Since about 20,000 years ago, the geography of the Earth has been profoundly modified by the gradual sea-level rise caused by the melting of continental ice sheets. Flat areas and regions characterized by very low gradients experienced, more than others, rapid flooding, with the progressive disappearance of vast coastal territories. Here we present a reconstruction of the late Quaternary coastline evolution of the north-western sector of the Sicilian Channel, constrained by high-resolution seismic profiles where the marker of the post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) marine transgression has been clearly identified and mapped. The locations of the post-LGM seismic horizon have been compared with predictions of a Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) model, which accounts for the migration of the shorelines in response to sea-level rise and for Earth's rotational and deformational effects associated with deglaciation. We have verified that most of the points mapped through seismic data interpretation fall along the palaeo-coastline that the GIA model predicts for the 21 kyrs B.P. time frame. However, the model shows a misfit in the marine sector between Mazara del Vallo and Sciacca, where the available data indicate a Quaternary tectonic uplift. The analysis of the seismic profiles provides useful constraints to current GIA models. These add on existing histories of relative sea level in the Mediterranean Sea, allowing to gain new insight into the evolution of the palaeo-geography of the region of study and of the whole Sicilian Channel since the LGM, even in areas where direct geophysical observations are not available yet. In this respect, one of the most attractive implications of the ancient coastline evolution is linked with the underwater archaeology. The sea-level rise heavily impacted the distribution of human settlements, possibly forcing site abandonment and migrations, and this is particularly relevant in the Mediterranean basin, the cradle of the western civilization. The underwater traces left by these ancient populations represent the fundamental proofs to reconstruct the early history of our precursors.
自大约 2 万年前以来,由于大陆冰盖融化导致海平面逐渐上升,地球的地理环境发生了深刻的变化。平坦地区和坡度非常小的地区经历了比其他地区更迅速的洪水泛滥,大片沿海地区逐渐消失。在这里,我们根据高分辨率地震剖面重建了西西里海峡西北部分的晚第四纪海岸线演化,在这些剖面上,末次冰期后(LGM)海侵的标志已被明确识别和绘制。将 LGM 后地震层位的位置与冰川均衡调整(GIA)模型的预测进行了比较,该模型考虑了由于海平面上升导致的海岸线迁移以及与冰川消退相关的地球自转和变形效应。我们已经验证,通过地震数据解释绘制的大多数点都沿着 GIA 模型预测的 21000 年前的古海岸线。然而,该模型在马扎拉德尔瓦洛和斯卡利亚之间的海洋区域存在不匹配,该区域的现有数据表明存在第四纪构造抬升。地震剖面的分析为当前的 GIA 模型提供了有用的约束。这些约束条件增加了地中海地区的相对海平面历史,使我们能够深入了解研究区域和整个西西里海峡自末次冰期以来的古地理演化,即使在尚未进行直接地球物理观测的区域也是如此。在这方面,古海岸线演化最吸引人的意义之一与水下考古学有关。海平面上升严重影响了人类住区的分布,可能导致遗址废弃和迁移,这在地中海地区尤为重要,因为地中海地区是西方文明的摇篮。这些古代人口留下的水下痕迹是重建我们祖先早期历史的基本证据。