A model for drowned terrestrial habitats with associated archeological remains in the northwestern Gulf of Maine, USA

TitleA model for drowned terrestrial habitats with associated archeological remains in the northwestern Gulf of Maine, USA
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsKelley, JT, Belknap, DF, Kelley, AR, Claesson, SH
JournalMarine Geology
Volume338
Pagination1-16
ISSN0025-3227
Abstract

Marine geophysical techniques and geological measurement of sea-level change allow detailed mapping of seafloor archeological sites and development of models. In the northwestern Gulf of Maine, the lowstand of sea level is only at − 60 m depth, but a prolonged stasis during the late Quaternary sea-level rise, herein termed the slowstand, occurred between 11,500 and 7500 calibrated years before present (cal yr BP) at depths of 15–25 m. This slowdown caused substantial erosion of glacial deposits and formed terrestrial beaches, wetlands and lakes. These landforms attracted people, whose tools were later discovered during present day scallop-fishing activities. Our study areas at the Green Islands and Bass Harbor are within the lowstand and slowstand depth ranges, but at highly exposed and sheltered sites, respectively. The Green Islands site has lost most of its former terrestrial sediment and there is no longer any context for recovered artifacts. At the protected Bass Harbor site, the remains of eroded moraines are associated with drowned spits and a former lacustrine/estuarine basin. Cores at the Bass Harbor location encountered freshwater peat deposits and numerous shallow subtidal shell and plant fossils all deposited during the slowstand. The two most important controls on the preservation of terrestrial landforms and associated human artifacts in the northwestern Gulf of Maine are the rate of sea-level rise and degree of shelter of the site from waves.

URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025322712002502
DOI10.1016/j.margeo.2012.10.016