Coastal subsidence causes sea-level rise, shoreline erosion and wetland loss, which poses a threat to coastal populations. This is especially evident in the Mississippi Delta in the southern United States, which was devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The loss of protective wetlands is considered a critical factor in the extensive flood damage. The causes of subsidence in coastal Louisiana, attributed to factors as diverse as shallow compaction and deep crustal processes, remain controversial. Current estimates of subsidence rates vary by several orders of magnitude. Here, we use a series of radiocarbon-dated sediment cores from the Mississippi Delta to analyse late Holocene deposits and assess compaction rates. We find that millennial...
A wealth of new data provides a well-constrained chronology of mid- to late Holocene coastal develop...
The Louisiana shoreline is rapidly retreating as a result of factors such as sea-level rise and land...
Hurricane Katrina made its final landfall on August 29, 2005, as a category three storm, at the mout...
Coastal subsidence causes sea-level rise, shoreline erosion and wetland loss, which poses a threat t...
Large deltas are commonly believed to exhibit rapid rates of tectonic subsidence, largely due to sed...
regional releveling profi les and six tide gauges provide a basis for evaluating recent rates of del...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Re...
Modern and forecasted flooding of deltas is accelerated by subsidence of Holocene deposits. Subsiden...
Sea level rise in the Gulf of Mexico has occurred at a rate of 1.8-2.2 mm/yr during the 20th century...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
Major deltas and their adjacent coastal plains are commonly linked by means of coast-parallel fluxe...
The decline of several of the world’s largest deltas has spurred interest in expensive coastal resto...
Abstract. Major deltas and their adjacent coastal plains are commonly linked by means of coast-paral...
Shoreline retreat is a tremendously important issue along the coast of the northern Gulf of Mexico, ...
Louisiana’s coastlines are being lost due to a rise in sea level and land subsidence. This study iso...
A wealth of new data provides a well-constrained chronology of mid- to late Holocene coastal develop...
The Louisiana shoreline is rapidly retreating as a result of factors such as sea-level rise and land...
Hurricane Katrina made its final landfall on August 29, 2005, as a category three storm, at the mout...
Coastal subsidence causes sea-level rise, shoreline erosion and wetland loss, which poses a threat t...
Large deltas are commonly believed to exhibit rapid rates of tectonic subsidence, largely due to sed...
regional releveling profi les and six tide gauges provide a basis for evaluating recent rates of del...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Re...
Modern and forecasted flooding of deltas is accelerated by subsidence of Holocene deposits. Subsiden...
Sea level rise in the Gulf of Mexico has occurred at a rate of 1.8-2.2 mm/yr during the 20th century...
The natural wetlands of coastal Louisiana are experiencing rapid subsidence rates averaging 9± 1mmyr...
Major deltas and their adjacent coastal plains are commonly linked by means of coast-parallel fluxe...
The decline of several of the world’s largest deltas has spurred interest in expensive coastal resto...
Abstract. Major deltas and their adjacent coastal plains are commonly linked by means of coast-paral...
Shoreline retreat is a tremendously important issue along the coast of the northern Gulf of Mexico, ...
Louisiana’s coastlines are being lost due to a rise in sea level and land subsidence. This study iso...
A wealth of new data provides a well-constrained chronology of mid- to late Holocene coastal develop...
The Louisiana shoreline is rapidly retreating as a result of factors such as sea-level rise and land...
Hurricane Katrina made its final landfall on August 29, 2005, as a category three storm, at the mout...