Global raster dataset on historical coastline positions and shelf sea extents since the Last Glacial Maximum

Johannes De Groeve*, Buntarou Kusumoto, Erik Koene, W. Daniel Kissling, Arie C. Seijmonsbergen, Bert W. Hoeksema, Moriaki Yasuhara, Sietze J. Norder, Sri Yudawati Cahyarini, Alexandra van der Geer, Hanneke J. M. Meijer, Yasuhiro Kubota, Kenneth F. Rijsdijk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Abstract Motivation Historical changes in sea level caused shifting coastlines that affected the distribution and evolution of marine and terrestrial biota. At the onset of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) 26 ka, sea levels were >130?m lower than at present, resulting in seaward-shifted coastlines and shallow shelf seas, with emerging land bridges leading to the isolation of marine biota and the connection of land-bridge islands to the continents. At the end of the last ice age, sea levels started to rise at unprecedented rates, leading to coastal retreat, drowning of land bridges and contraction of island areas. Although a growing number of studies take historical coastline dynamics into consideration, they are mostly based on past global sea-level stands and present-day water depths and neglect the influence of global geophysical changes on historical coastline positions. Here, we present a novel geophysically corrected global historical coastline position raster for the period from 26 ka to the present. This coastline raster allows, for the first time, calculation of global and regional coastline retreat rates and land loss rates. Additionally, we produced, per time step, 53 shelf sea rasters to present shelf sea positions and to calculate the shelf sea expansion rates. These metrics are essential to assess the role of isolation and connectivity in shaping marine and insular biodiversity patterns and evolutionary signatures within species and species assemblages. Main types of variables contained The coastline age raster contains cells with ages in thousands of years before present (bp), representing the time since the coastline was positioned in the raster cells, for the period between 26 ka and the present. A total of 53 shelf sea rasters (sea levels
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2159-2380
JournalGlobal Ecology and Biogeography
Volume31
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2022

Bibliographical note

https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13573

Keywords

  • coastline retreat
  • connectivity change
  • glacial sensitive model
  • insular biodiversity patterns
  • palaeogeography
  • Pleistocene climate change
  • prehistorical human settlement
  • sea-level fluctuations
  • shelf expansion

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