Imprints of historical pollution and the 218-60 BCE tsunamigenic period in southwestern Spain
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Luz Gonzalez-Regalado, Maria
Monge, Guadalupe
Isabel Carretero, Maria
Pozo, Manuel
Rodriguez-Vidal, Joaquin
Miguel Caceres, Luis
Abad, Manuel
Manuel Campos, Juan
Bermejo, Javier
Tosquella, Josep
Izquierdo, Tatiana
Isabel Prudencio, Maria
Isabel Dias, Maria
Marques, Rosa
Gomez, Paula
Toscano, Antonio
Romero, Veronica
Ruiz, Francisco
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.22201/cgeo.20072902e.2020.1.1543
Abstract
The Donana National Park is a Biosphere Reserve located within the estuary of the Guadalquivir River (SW Spain). It is mainly composed of extensive fluvio-tidal marshes partially protected by an elongated sandy spit. Three phases have been distinguished in the late Holocene evolution of this spit based on textural, geochemical, palaeontological and, chronological data recorded in a long core (31 m). Phase 1 (890 BCE-218 BCE) is characterized by the alternation of lagoonal silty sediments and slightly polluted marsh deposits, the latter with contamination from thousand-year-old mining. Phase 2 (218 BCE-90 CE) is characterized by several historical tsunamis, which caused the erosion of previous dune systems and the deposit of these sandy sediments on the adjacent bottom of the lagoon. Phase 3 (90 CE-Present) includes a regressive sequence (lagoonal bottom-marsh-dune system), with the pollution of lagoonal sediments due to Roman mining activities.


