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A ∼200-year relative sea-level reconstruction from the Wellington region (New Zealand) reveals insights into vertical land movement trends

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posted on 2024-06-18, 02:39 authored by DJ King, RM Newnham, Andrew ReesAndrew Rees, KJ Clark, E Garrett, WR Gehrels, Timothy NaishTimothy Naish, Richard LevyRichard Levy
The sea-level rise threat to New Zealand's coastal cities is regionally exacerbated due to spatially varying vertical land movement (VLM). At Wellington, the capital city, situated adjacent to a major active plate boundary, strong regional spatial and temporal variability of VLM is indicated by the relatively short (∼25 year-long) continuous Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) network, but until now longer records of VLM have been lacking. Here, a ∼ 200-year-long relative sea-level reconstruction is presented from Pāuatahanui salt marsh in the northern Wellington region. The foraminifera-based relative sea-level reconstruction indicates that ∼1 ± 0.45 m of sudden uplift occurred during the 1855CE Mw 8.2 Wairarapa earthquake. Following this, Pāuatahanui has experienced a mean rate of relative sea-level rise (1855CE to present) of 1.5 ± 0.6 mm/yr, or 2.4 ± 0.8 mm/yr since the start of the twentieth century, consistent with ongoing subsidence in concert with climate-driven sea-level rise. Further acceleration to >3 mm/yr since the 1990s (with 4 mm/yr also possible if the full 95% confidence range is taken into consideration) is consistent with the globally documented acceleration in sea-level rise, although low model precision hampers confidence in this interpretation. This record is the first of its kind from a tectonically complex setting in New Zealand, shedding light on the effects of the historically significant 1855 earthquake, and fills a gap between millennial-scale and contemporary records of VLM with important implications for future sea-level projections in the region.

Funding

NZ SeaRise Programme | Funder: MINISTRY OF BUSINESS INNOVATION AND EMPLOYMENT

NZ SeaRise Programme (NSC2a) | Funder: Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

NZ SeaRise Residual | Funder: Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington

History

Preferred citation

King, D. J., Newnham, R. M., Rees, A. B. H., Clark, K. J., Garrett, E., Gehrels, W. R., Naish, T. R. & Levy, R. H. (2024). A ∼200-year relative sea-level reconstruction from the Wellington region (New Zealand) reveals insights into vertical land movement trends. Marine Geology, 467, 107199-107199. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2023.107199

Journal title

Marine Geology

Volume

467

Publication date

2024-01-01

Pagination

107199-107199

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Publication status

Published

ISSN

0025-3227

Article number

107199

Language

en

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