Climate of the Past (Jul 2013)

Caspian sea-level changes during the last millennium: historical and geological evidence from the south Caspian Sea

  • A. Naderi Beni,
  • H. Lahijani,
  • R. Mousavi Harami,
  • K. Arpe,
  • S. A. G. Leroy,
  • N. Marriner,
  • M. Berberian,
  • V. Andrieu-Ponel,
  • M. Djamali,
  • A. Mahboubi,
  • P. J. Reimer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-9-1645-2013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 1645 – 1665

Abstract

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Historical literature may constitute a valuable source of information to reconstruct sea-level changes. Here, historical documents and geological records have been combined to reconstruct Caspian sea-level (CSL) changes during the last millennium. In addition to a comprehensive literature review, new data from two short sediment cores were obtained from the south-eastern Caspian coast to identify coastal change driven by water-level changes and to compare the results with other geological and historical findings. The overall results indicate a high-stand during the Little Ice Age, up to −21 m (and extra rises due to manmade river avulsion), with a −28 m low-stand during the Medieval Climate Anomaly, while presently the CSL stands at −26.5 m. A comparison of the CSL curve with other lake systems and proxy records suggests that the main sea-level oscillations are essentially paced by solar irradiance. Although the major controller of the long-term CSL changes is driven by climatological factors, the seismicity of the basin creates local changes in base level. These local base-level changes should be considered in any CSL reconstruction.