Paleomagnetic and astronomical dating of sediment core BH08 from the Bohai Sea, China: Implications for glacial–interglacial sedimentation

2014 
Abstract Sediments from the continental shelf/coastal region bear significant signals of sea-level, climate change as well as local tectonic information. This study presents a high-resolution magnetostratigraphic and rock magnetic study of a 212.4 m core (BH08, with a basal age of 1.06 Ma) recovered from the shallow ( 18 O records at 40- and 100-kyr cycles, indicating that the sediments in the study area are continuous at least at orbital timescales regardless of significant base-level variations. This is likely due to continued subsidence in the basin and creation of accommodation space. The significant lower sedimentary accumulation rates since 750 ka might be due to the deviation of the depositional locus from core site because of extreme low sea-level stands during the glacials since the Mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT). Especially the glacial sea-level lowstands might have resulted in bypassing or erosion of sediments on the BH08 core site during peak glacials (MIS 6, MIS 10 and MIS 16), limiting the sediment preservation potential. This study documents the longest Quaternary sedimentary succession in the Bohai Sea and provides, for the first time, a clear link between sedimentation in the area and glacial–interglacial climate-driven sea-level changes. This study also highlights the feasibility of astronomical tuning to obtain high-resolution chronology for shallow shelf deposits, which is otherwise very difficult to be achieved on the basis of magnetostratigraphic data alone.
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