*Kenta MAEGAKIUCHI1, Masayuki HYODO2, Ikuko KITABA3, Hiroshi SATO4
(1.Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Kobe Univ., 2.Research Center for Inland Seas, Kobe Univ, 3.Research Centre for Palaeoclimatology, Ritsumeikan University, 4.Institute of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Hyogo)
Keywords:sea-level change, Marine Isotope Stage 19, Middle Pleistocene Transition, diatom, Osaka Group, Matuyama-Brunhes Transition
Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 19 is climatologically important as an orbital analogue of the Holocene, besides its stratigraphic importance as a candidate for the Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary. We conducted diatom analyses of marine clay sediments in the 1700-m core of the Osaka Group to estimate sea-level changes during MIS 19. The marine condition and diatom assemblages in Osaka Bay are strongly affected by eustatic sea-level change. The homogeneous fine clay sediment and its high average accumulation rate (63 cm/kyr) can yield millennial to centennial scale sea-level changes. Variations in diatom assemblages are classified into four ecological categories ; marine, marine-brackish, brackish,and freshwater. Marine taxa define marine zone, ranging in depth from 405.60m to 390.62 m. Diatom assenmblages clearly show precession-related signals for two sea-level highstands correlated with MIS 19.3 and 19.1, and a lowstand with 19.2, respectively. In addition, we found a rapid sea-level fall event in the earliest phase of MIS 19. This event suddenly began at a depth of 403.88 m with rapid decrease in marine-planktonic diatoms, and strong increases in marine-benthic and freshwater-planktonic diatoms, followed by a relatively gradual recovery to the pre-event levels at a depth of 403.27m. An astronomical age model shows its duration of 783ka-782ka. We examined benthic marine oxygen isotope records from deep-sea and coastal marine sediments, some of which have a signal comparable to the sea-level fall event in the earliest MIS 19, suggesting the temporal expansion of global ice sheet. The rapid sea-level fall during the period concerned may reflect a global event.