“…Along the west coast of South Korea, facing the eastern Yellow Sea, estuaries of large rivers such as the Han, Geum, and Yeongsan Rivers are widely distributed from north to south; these are tide-dominated depositional environments (Chough et al, 2004) forming a variety of deposits during the Late Pleistocene and Holocene (Park et al, 1998;Choi et al, 2003;Lim and Park, 2003;Nahm et al, 2008;Nahm and Hong, 2014;Moon et al, 2018). During the Holocene, these western coastal areas would have experienced dramatic environmental changes due to e.g., sea-level changes such as the Holocene transgression (Stanley and Warne, 1994;Kim and Kennett, 1998), the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) activity (e.g., Lim et al, 2017;Lu et al, 2018;Lim et al, 2019), the eastern Asian Monsoon (EAM; e.g., Chang, 2004;Dykoski et al, 2005;Selvaraj et al, 2007), and the Holocene climate optimum (HCO; e.g., An et al, 2000;Zhou et al, 2016;Park et al, 2019).…”