A late Holocene palaeoenvironmental record from Altona Bay, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands

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A reconstruction of the palaeoenvironmental development of Altona Bay, St. Croix, northeastern Caribbean, has been made based on the sedimentological, geochemical and pollen analyses of a 1.83 m long vibracore. For chronological control, AMS 14 C measurements were made at 5 levels downcore. The sedimentary sequence covers the last c. 4700 years, containing both (mangrove) peat and fine-grained clastic sediment units. Comparison with regional Holocene sea level data demonstrates a gradual marine flooding of a mangrove environment around 3500 cal BP was presumably related to a regional late Holocene sea-level rise, from a position, c.2 m lower than present. After a c. 1000 year period of marine sedimentation lasting until c. 2500 cal BP, renewed formation of tropical wetland occurred at the site. This development may be attributed to the increased isolation of the shallow Altona Bay, most likely due to seaward formation of a well-developed spit system and possibly under the influence of enhanced storm-wave action in the period between c. 4000 and 2200 cal BP. Since the 1960's the repeated passage of severe hurricanes (e.g. Hugo, 1989) has had a significant impact on the sedimentation pattern of the bay and have caused a major hiatus and the recent deposition of sediments immediately overlying the c. 2500 year old peat.
Original languageEnglish
JournalGeografisk Tidsskrift
Volume108
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)59-70
ISSN0016-7223
Publication statusPublished - 2008

    Research areas

  • Faculty of Science - Caribbean, lagoon environment, mangrove, tsunami, hurricane, sea level rise, Holocene

ID: 9147893