Stratigraphic evidence for an early Holocene earthquake in Aceh, Indonesia

Candace A. Grand Pre, Benjamin P. Horton*, Harvey M. Kelsey, Charles M. Rubin, Andrea D. Hawkes, Mudrik R. Daryono, Gary Rosenberg, Stephen J. Culver

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The Holocene stratigraphy of the coastal plain of the Aceh Province of Sumatra contains 6 m of sediment with three regionally consistent buried soils above pre-Quaternary bedrock or pre-Holocene unconsolidated sediment. Litho-, bio-, and chronostratigraphic analyses of the lower buried soil reveals a rapid change in relative sea-level caused by coseismic subsidence during an early Holocene megathrust earthquake. Evidence for paleoseismic subsidence is preserved as a buried mangrove soil, dominated by a pollen assemblage of Rhizophora and/or Bruguiera/Ceriops taxa. The soil is abruptly overlain by a thin tsunami sand. The sand contains mixed pollen and abraded foraminiferal assemblages of both offshore and onshore environments. The tsunami sand grades upward into mud that contains both well-preserved foraminifera of intertidal origin and individuals of the gastropod Cerithidea cingulata. Radiocarbon ages from the pre- and post-seismic sedimentary sequences constrain the paleoearthquake to 6500-7000 cal. yrs. BP. We use micro-and macrofossil data to determine the local paleoenvironment before and after the earthquake. We estimate coseismic subsidence to be 0.45 ± 0.30 m, which is comparable to the 0.6 m of subsidence observed during the 2004 Aceh-Andaman earthquake on Aceh's west coast.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)142-151
Number of pages10
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume54
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 26 2012
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Archaeology
  • Archaeology
  • Geology

Keywords

  • Foraminifera
  • Paleoseismicity
  • Pollen
  • Relative sea level
  • Subsidence stratigraphy
  • Sumatra
  • Tsunami deposit

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