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Using chronological models in late Holocene sea-level reconstructions from saltmarsh sediments
Parnell, A.C.; Gehrels, W.R. (2015). Using chronological models in late Holocene sea-level reconstructions from saltmarsh sediments, in: Shennan, I. et al. Handbook of sea-level research. pp. 500-513. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118452547.ch32
In: Shennan, I.; Long, A.J.; Horton, B.P. (Ed.) (2015). Handbook of sea-level research. John Wiley & Sons: Chichester. ISBN 978-1-13-9235-77-8. xiv, 581, a36 pp. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118452547, more

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  • Parnell, A.C.
  • Gehrels, W.R.

Abstract
    In the last decade or so, many studies from mid-and high-latitude coastal settings have shown that high-resolution sea-level reconstructions can be derived from chronological and micropaleontological analyses of saltmarsh sediment cores. The inclusion of uncertainties in the analysis of data is a vital aspect of these sea-level studies. One key uncertainty is that of the age of the sea-level index points (SLIPs). In Holocene paleoecological studies from environments where sedimentation rates are more constant the use of chronological age modeling is more common. This chapter shows how these uncertainties might be estimated appropriately using statistical chronology models, and then used to estimate rates of sea-level change. Finally, the chapter provides two case studies based on sea-level data from Iceland and Tasmania, for which one can estimate chronology models and calculate rates of sea-level change.

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