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CATASTROPHIC FLOODING OF THE BLACK SEA
by
Ryan, William B.F.
, Major, Candace O.
, Goldstein, Steven L.
, Lericolais, Gilles
in
Floods
/ Freshwater lakes
/ Meltwater
/ Ocean floor
/ Quaternary
/ Saline water
2003
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Do you wish to request the book?
CATASTROPHIC FLOODING OF THE BLACK SEA
by
Ryan, William B.F.
, Major, Candace O.
, Goldstein, Steven L.
, Lericolais, Gilles
in
Floods
/ Freshwater lakes
/ Meltwater
/ Ocean floor
/ Quaternary
/ Saline water
2003
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Journal Article
CATASTROPHIC FLOODING OF THE BLACK SEA
2003
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Overview
Decades of seabed mapping, reflection profiling, and seabed sampling reveal
that throughout the past two million years the Black Sea was predominantly a
freshwater lake interrupted only briefly by saltwater invasions coincident with
global sea level highstand. When the exterior ocean lay below the relatively
shallow sill of the Bosporus outlet, the Black Sea operated in two modes. As in
the neighboring Caspian Sea, a cold climate mode corresponded with an expanded
lake and a warm climate mode with a shrunken lake. Thus, during much of the
cold glacial Quaternary, the expanded Black Sea's lake spilled into to the
Marmara Sea and from there to the Mediterranean. However, in the warm climate
mode, after receiving a vast volume of ice sheet meltwater, the shoreline of
the shrinking lake contracted to the outer shelf and on a few occasions even
beyond the shelf edge. If the confluence of a falling interior lake and a
rising global ocean persisted to the moment when the rising ocean penetrated
across the dividing sill, it would set the stage for catastrophic flooding.
Although recently challenged, the flood hypothesis for the connecting event
best fits the full set of observations.
Publisher
Annual Reviews,Annual Reviews, Inc
Subject
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