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Uranium and amino acid geochronology data for marine terraces around San Luis Obispo Bay, central California, USA

December 4, 2025

In the San Luis Obispo Bay area of central California, interpretations of marine terrace ages have been hampered by inconsistent results from geochronological indicators (U-series ages of corals and correlations using amino acid racemization of mollusks) and seemingly contradictory paleozoogeographic aspects of fossil faunal assemblages. The two lowest-elevation terraces are Q1 (lower) and Q2 (upper) and both are thought to date from high-sea stands of marine isotope stage (MIS) 5, the last interglacial complex. A combination of U-series dating and amino acid racemization results indicates that the Q1 terrace probably dates to the ~80 high-sea stand of MIS 5a. U-series analyses of corals from the Q2 terrace show open-system histories, but consideration of two alternative open-system histories indicates that this terrace likely hosts corals dating to both of the high-sea stands MIS 5c (~105-95 ka) and MIS 5e (~130-115 ka). Amino acid ratios in fossil Leukoma staminea support the age differences between the two terraces and the open-system models suggested by the U-series data. The paleozoogeographic aspects of the molluscan faunas from the Q2 terrace support an interpretation that these deposits contain a mixture of fossils from both the MIS 5c and 5e high-sea stands. Fossils from the Q2 terrace include southern or southward-ranging species (likely dating to MIS 5e) and northern or northward-ranging species (likely dating to MIS 5c). A mixture of MIS 5e and MIS 5c fossils on the Q2 terrace is consistent with similar data reported for other localities in California. This phenomenon is explained by glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) processes, which brought about a higher-than-present sea level during MIS 5c. GIA processes, combined with a low uplift rate, allowed mixing of MIS 5e fossils during the MIS 5c high-sea stand through capture of an MIS 5e terrace that had experienced minimal uplift in ~20,000 years. Terrace reoccupation and fossil mixing such as that in the San Luis Obispo Bay area can be expected along any part of the Pacific Coast of North America that was affected by GIA processes and where uplift rates are low.

Publication Year 2025
Title Uranium and amino acid geochronology data for marine terraces around San Luis Obispo Bay, central California, USA
DOI 10.5066/P13YSWT6
Authors Daniel R Muhs, Lindsey T. Groves, R. Randall Schumann, Jordon E. Bright
Product Type Data Release
Record Source USGS Asset Identifier Service (AIS)
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
Rights This work is marked with CC0 1.0 Universal
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