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ARTICLE IN PRESS







                                            Quaternary Science Reviews 24 (2005) 1969–1988




           Sea-level change in the Mediterranean Sea since the LGM: model
                               predictions for tectonically stable areas


                                         Kurt Lambeck , Anthony Purcell

                          Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia
                                           Received17 March 2004; accepted 22 June 2004



          Abstract

           Sea-level change in the Mediterranean Sea during glacial cycles is determined by the temporally variable eustatic change and by
          the spatially variable glacio-hydro-isostatic response of the earth and ocean to the growth and decay of ice sheets. Superimposed
          upon this are the relative changes from any vertical tectonic movement of the land. For sites that are either tectonically stable or
          where the magnitude of tectonic uplift is known, comparisons of observed change with predictions of the glacio-hydro-eustatic
          signals provide constraints on the earth–ice parameters used. The resulting predictive models can then be used to interpolate sea-
          level change andshoreline migration between the spatially and temporally limitedobservational data set. Whether such parameters
          reflect the true properties of the mantle and ice sheets depends on whether an effective separation has been achieved from the
          inversion of the observational data set. This paper explores this issue and demonstrates that observations from certain regions in the
          Mediterranean are particularly important in effecting the separation. This is supported by a trial analysis of a small observation data
          set from sites that exhibit some of the desirable features of an ideal data set. Basin-wide predictions of sea-level change, palaeo-water
          depth and shoreline locations based on these analyses are presented for selected epochs.
          r 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.




          1. Introduction                                     if the growth anddecay history of the continental ice is
                                                              known. In contrast, the changes wrought by tectonic
           Sea level is defined by the position of the sea surface  processes, tendto be less predictable, of shorter
          relative to the adjacent land and sea-level change is a  wavelength and more episodic than the glacially-driven
          measure of the relative shift in position of these two  change. When combined, the two contributions result in
          surfaces. A principal process contributing to sea-level  a complex spatial andtemporal pattern of sea-level
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          change on glacial time scales is the exchange of water  change. On longer time scales, of order 410 years,
          between the continental ice sheets andthe oceans, upon  geological processes may become dominant in affecting
          which may be superimposedvertical land movements    sea level, such as plate-tectonic-driven modification of
          driven by active tectonic processes. The growth and  ocean-basin geometry. On shorter time scales, of years
          decay of the ice sheets change the ocean volume, deform  and decades and for which it has been instrumentally
          the ocean basins andtheir margins, and modify the   monitored, oceanographic and climatic forcing (includ-
          gravitational field, or geoid, of the planet. All three  ing thermal expansion) of the ocean surface may become
          effects modify sea level. The deformational and gravita-  important.
          tional effects are spatially variable, functions largely of  The Mediterranean basin has experienced major sea-
          the distance from the ice sheets, but they are predictable  level change during glacial cycles, evidence for which
                                                              occurs in both the geological andarchaeological
                                                              records, of decreasing resolution with time, throughout
            Corresponding author. Tel.: +61 2 6125 5161;
          fax: +61 2 6125 5443.                               the last glacial cycle. The analysis of this information
            E-mail address: kurt.lambeck@anu.edu.au (K. Lambeck).  from across the region can provide insights into the

          0277-3791/$ - see front matter r 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
          doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.06.025
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