Abstract. The Tunisian coast has been affected in the past by many events of extreme marine submersion (storms and tsunamis). A high-resolution study along two sediment cores taken from the lagoon of Ghar El Meleh was performed to identify the different paleoextreme events and to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental changes in the northeastern part of Tunisia during
the Late Holocene. A very high-resolution sedimentological analysis
(granulometric and geochemical) was applied to these cores. These cores
were also dated with isotopic techniques (137Cs, 210Pbex, 14C), and the outcomes reveal five phases of paleoenvironmental changes in this lagoonal complex and identify two sediment layers that are in connection with two major historical marine submersion events. The first layer is mentioned as E1 and seems to fit with the great tsunami of 365 cal CE. This event was marked by an increase in the coarse sediment, and it is correlated for the first time with the immersed city of Neapolis in the northern Gulf of Hammamet discovered in 2017 by the same tsunamis of 365 cal CE. The other sandy layer, referred to as E2, was dated from 1690 to 1760 cal CE and is marked by one specific sedimentological layer attributed to a marine submersion event. This layer could be associated with the 1693 tsunami event in southern Italy or an increase in extreme storm events.
Abstract. The Tunisian coast has been affected in the past by many events of extreme marine submersion (storms and tsunamis). A high-resolution study along two sediment cores GEM3 and GEM4 taken from the lagoon of the Ghar el Melh was performed to identify the different paleo-extreme events and to reconstruct the paleo-environmental changes of the North-eastern part of Tunisia during the Late Holocene. A very high-resolution of analysis (sedimentological, granulometric, and geochemical) was applied on these cores. These cores were also dated with isotopic techniques (137Cs, 210Pbex, 14C) and the outcomes reveal fives phases of paleoenvironmental changes of this lagoonal complex. The first phase dated from −275 to 200 Cal AD characterized by a high percentage of Silt and Clay (fine particles) indicating a protected lagoon. The second phase synchronous with the Dark Age Climatic Period dated from 200 to 1100 Cal AD, is marked by an increase in the coarse sediment and could be explained by a weakening of the sandy barrier due to an increase of storm events. The third phase is characterized by a return to a closed lagoon during the Medieval Warm Period (from 1100 to 1690 Cal AD). The fourth phase dated from 1690 to 1760 Cal AD coincide with the Little Ice Age and is marked by one specific sedimentological layer attributed to a marine submersion event. This layer could be associated to the 1693 tsunami event in southern Italy or an increase of extreme storm events. The fifth phase covering the last 250 years present a reclosing of the lagoon.
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