Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8907950 Geomorphology 2018 60 Pages PDF
Abstract
Compared to some other Indo-Pacific reef islands, island initiation at Takapoto appears to be have been delayed by 2 to 4 millennia, probably in response to retardation in the reef catching-up with mid-Holocene sea level. Dating of individual coarse-grained coral clasts allowed the major wave-surge events that have hit Takapoto to be identified for the last millennium. The use of gravels results in the identification of a greater number of medium-energy surge impacts, when compared with megaclast-based records. The frequency of storm events identified is consistent with that derived from historical observations; severe storms have a very low frequency of occurrence - one to two events per century on average.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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