Marawah is one of a chain of barrier islands off the coast of Abu Dhabi that separates the Khor Al Bazm lagoon from the open waters of the Arabian Gulf. The island consists of several rocky cores of Pleistocene limestone linked by areas of unconsolidated Holocene carbonates. It has the most complete Quaternary outcrop sequence in the region and the lowest exposed unit, a coralline limestone, had not been recorded previously. The Pleistocene deposits accumulated partly in a shallow-marine environment and partly under eolian conditions. The Marawah sections have revealed new data about the history of the southern Gulf in the late Pleistocene, a time interval of which little was known. The survey has shown that there were periods when sea level was close to present-day levels and other times when it was approximately 4 to 5 m higher than today. A phase of deflation and the development of a field of eolian sand dunes separated these two sea-level highstands. The unconsolidated sediments have accumulated around the Pleistocene rock cores since about 4,500 years BP to give the island its present form. Accumulation occurred because of wave action driven by the northwesterly 'Shamal' winds during periods of slightly falling or almost stationary sea level.
CITATION STYLE
Evans, G., Kirkham, A., & Carter, R. A. (2002). Quaternary development of the United Arab Emirates Coast: New evidence from Marawah Island, Abu Dhabi. GeoArabia, 7(3), 441–458. https://doi.org/10.2113/geoarabia0703441
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