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The morphology of insular shelves as a key for understanding the geological evolution of volcanic islands: Insights from Terceira Island (Azores)

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors used bathymetry and high-resolution seismic reflection profiles to characterize the morphology of the insular shelves adjacent to each volcanic edifice of Terceira Island in order to improve the understanding of its evolution.
Abstract
Shelves from volcanic ocean islands result from the competition between two main processes, wave erosion that forms and enlarges them and volcanic progradation that reduces their dimension. In places where erosion dominates over volcanism, shelf width can be used as a proxy for the relative age of the subaerial volcanic edifices and reconstruction of their extents prior to erosion can be achieved. In this study, new multibeam bathymetry and high-resolution seismic reflection profiles are exploited to characterize the morphology of the insular shelves adjacent to each volcanic edifice of Terceira Island in order to improve the understanding of its evolution. Subaerial morphological and geological/stratigraphic data were also used to establish the connection between the onshore and offshore evolution. Shelf width contiguous to each main volcanic edifice is consistent with the known subaerial geological history of the island; most of the older edifices have wider shelves than younger ones. The shelf edge proved to be a very useful indicator in revealing the original extent of each volcanic edifice in plan view. Its depth was also used to reconstruct vertical movements, showing that older edifices like Serra do Cume-Ribeirinha, Guilherme Moniz, and Pico Alto have subsided while more recent ones have not. The morphology of the shelf (namely the absence/presence of fresh lava flow morphologies and several types of erosional, depositional, and tectonic features) integrated with the analysis of the coastline morphology allowed us to better constrain previous geological interpretations of the island evolution.

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The role of subsidence in shelf widening around ocean island volcanoes: Insights from observed morphology and modeling

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used shelf bathymetric profiles from Faial and Sao Jorge islands in the Azores to evaluate the contribution of subsidence to shelf widening and found that subsidence may have been responsible for increasing shelf width.
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The multimethod palaeointensity approach applied to volcanics from Terceira: full-vector geomagnetic data for the past 50 kyr

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated 21 (sub-) sites sampled from 10 different cooling units; six of these cooling units are from the Holocene, the other four are approximately coeval with the age of known geomagnetic excursions.
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Fossil Mysticeti from the Pleistocene of Santa Maria Island, Azores (Northeast Atlantic Ocean), and the prevalence of fossil cetaceans on oceanic islands

TL;DR: Avila et al. as discussed by the authors reported a fragment from the mandible of a medium-to large-sized baleen-bearing mysticete (i.e., Chaeomysticeti) from the Santa Maria Island of the Azores island archipelago in the North Atlantic Ocean.
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The influence of wave power on bedrock sea-cliff erosion in the Hawaiian Islands

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used lava flow ages and the morphology of coastal profiles on Maui, Kaho'olawe, and the Big Island of Hawai'i (USA) to estimate sea cliff retreat rates at 11 sites that experience nearly eightfold differences in incident wave power.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelled atmospheric temperatures and global sea levels over the past million years

TL;DR: A coupled model of the Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and ocean temperatures, forced to match an oxygen isotope record for the past million years compiled from 57 globally distributed sediment cores, finds that during extreme glacial stages, air temperatures were 17.8 °C lower than present, with a 120 ± 10 m sea level equivalent of continental ice present.
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Azores mantle blob: Rare-earth evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, rare earths (RE) in basalts erupted within the rift of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge show a progressive change from light-RE enriched to depleted patterns from the Azores Platform (40°N) down to 33°30′N.
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Large landslides from oceanic volcanoes

TL;DR: This paper showed that steep flanks formerly attributed to tilting or marine erosion have been reinterpreted as landslide headwalls mantled by younger lava flows, and suggested that seacliffs previously attributed to marine erosion of many additional islands may instead be headwall of still other landslides.
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Modeling the development of wave-cut shore platforms

TL;DR: In this article, a mathematical model was used to investigate the development of wave-cut shore platforms with constant sea level, considering the effects of deep water wave height spectra, period and wavelength, breaker height and depth, breaker type, the width and bottom roughness of the surf zone, the gradient of the submarine slope, an erosional threshold related to the strength of the rocks, the number of hours each year in which the water level is at each intertidal elevation and the amount and persistence of the debris at the cliff foot.
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