We collected modern diatom samples from Currituck Barrier Island, Oregon Inlet and Pea Island marshes, Outer Banks, North Carolina, USA, which have different salinity regimes due to their varying distances from a major barrier island inlet. Multivariate analyses separate the saltmarsh diatom assemblages into distinct elevational zones, dominated by differing abundances of polyhalobous, mesohalobous and oligohalobous taxa, suggesting that the distribution of saltmarsh diatoms is a direct function of elevation, with the most important controlling factors being the duration and frequency of subaerial exposure. We developed the first diatom-based transfer function for the east coast of North America to reconstruct former sea levels based upon t...
Diatoms, vascular vegetation, sediment data and water salinity from contemporary intertidal environm...
The spatial and temporal distribution of modern diatom assemblages in surface sediments, on the most...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
We collected modern diatom samples from Currituck Barrier Island, Oregon Inlet and Pea Island marshe...
We collected modern diatom samples from Currituck Barrier Island, Oregon Inlet and Pea Island marshe...
An understanding of the modern relationship between diatom species and elevation is a prerequisite f...
Foraminifera and diatoms preserved in salt-marsh sediments have been used to produce high-resolution...
The recent growth in the use of microfossil-based transfer functions in late-Quaternary sea-level re...
This research analyses the diatom assemblages recorded from six UK coastal sites and relates these d...
Concerns surrounding possible future climate change, sea level rise, and their potential impacts on ...
Records of late Holocene relative sea level (RSL) change are critical for understanding the mechanis...
We produced a relative sea-level (RSL) reconstruction from Connecticut (USA) spanning the last ∼2200...
Future sea-level rise will dramatically affect coastal landscapes and populations. The coast of Nor...
Foraminifera from salt-marsh environments have been used extensively in quantitative relative sea-le...
ABSTRACT: We present an expanded training set of salt-marsh foraminifera for reconstructing Holocene...
Diatoms, vascular vegetation, sediment data and water salinity from contemporary intertidal environm...
The spatial and temporal distribution of modern diatom assemblages in surface sediments, on the most...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
We collected modern diatom samples from Currituck Barrier Island, Oregon Inlet and Pea Island marshe...
We collected modern diatom samples from Currituck Barrier Island, Oregon Inlet and Pea Island marshe...
An understanding of the modern relationship between diatom species and elevation is a prerequisite f...
Foraminifera and diatoms preserved in salt-marsh sediments have been used to produce high-resolution...
The recent growth in the use of microfossil-based transfer functions in late-Quaternary sea-level re...
This research analyses the diatom assemblages recorded from six UK coastal sites and relates these d...
Concerns surrounding possible future climate change, sea level rise, and their potential impacts on ...
Records of late Holocene relative sea level (RSL) change are critical for understanding the mechanis...
We produced a relative sea-level (RSL) reconstruction from Connecticut (USA) spanning the last ∼2200...
Future sea-level rise will dramatically affect coastal landscapes and populations. The coast of Nor...
Foraminifera from salt-marsh environments have been used extensively in quantitative relative sea-le...
ABSTRACT: We present an expanded training set of salt-marsh foraminifera for reconstructing Holocene...
Diatoms, vascular vegetation, sediment data and water salinity from contemporary intertidal environm...
The spatial and temporal distribution of modern diatom assemblages in surface sediments, on the most...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...