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Featured researches published by Monica Bini.


Journal of Coastal Research | 2011

Holocene Beach Ridges and Coastal Evolution in the Cabo Raso Bay (Atlantic Patagonian Coast, Argentina)

Adriano Ribolini; Marina Laura Aguirre; Ilaria Baneschi; I. Consoloni; Enrique Fucks; Ilaria Isola; Francesco Mazzarini; Marta Pappalardo; Giovanni Zanchetta; Monica Bini

Abstract The Holocene evolution of the Cabo Raso bay (Atlantic Patagonian coast) was reconstructed by means of geomorphological, stratigraphic, and palaeontological analyses, assisted by radiocarbon dating. Six beach ridges were individuated and mapped in the field, as well as some rocky erosional landforms, e.g., inner margins of marine terraces. Thanks to quarry sections, the internal structure of beach ridges, their relationship with continental deposits, and the fossil contents were determined. Two specimens of Aulacomya atra and Brachidontes purpuratus were radiocarbon dated at 6055 and 4500 ± 20 YBP, respectively. The bedrock outcrops at the base of an analysed section allowed us to associate the age of the samples collected to the elevation of the marine transgression surface upon which the entire deposit rests. Because a beach ridge is a regressive form, the elevation of the base of the dated deposit was assumed to be equivalent to or slightly lower than the maximum sea-level stationing, represented by the inner margin of the coheval marine terrace. The altimetric correlation between the base of the beach ridge dated at 6055 ± 20 YBP and the inner margin of the corresponding marine terraces allowed us to constrain the maximum Holocene marine transgression to about 3 to 2 m above sea level. This elevation for the maximum Holocene transgression is lower than that shown by most of the previous data for Patagonian coast, but it shows a crude agreement with recent estimates coming from geophysical models that report, for this area, a departure from the eustatic value of sea level, mainly caused by glacioisostatic process. This means that the employment of marine erosional landforms, associated with other multisource field data, proved to be determinant for reconstructing the sea-level variation in the Patagonian coast.


Journal of Maps | 2011

Geomorphologic Map of Northeastern Sector of San Jorge Gulf (Chubut, Argentina)

Ilaria Isola; Monica Bini; Adriano Ribolini; Marta Pappalardo; I. Consoloni; Enrique Fucks; Gabriela M. Boretto; Luca Ragaini; Giovanno Zanchetta

Abstract Please click here to download the map associated with this article. This paper presents a 1:100,000 scale geomorphologic map of the Northeastern sector of San Jorge Gulf (Chubut Province) in Patagonia, Argentina, covering more than 1,000 km. Derived from remote sensing data and validated by three field surveys, it has been compiled in order to understand the past and recent evolution of the area with particular reference to sea-level oscillation studies, for which this map is the basic tool. The very low human impact and rates of dynamic landscape change allow the preservation of extensive palaeo deposits and landforms, including those indicative of sea-level variations. The relative change of sea level dominates landscape evolution, allowing the formation of widespread marine and lagoon deposits often interfingering with fluvial deposits and reworked by aeolian process in the framework of consequent beach progradation.


International Journal of Geographical Information Science | 2012

A multidisciplinary approach to reveal palaeo-hydrographic features: the case study of Luna archaeological site surroundings

Marina Bisson; Monica Bini

This article presents a multidisciplinary study implemented in Geographic Information System (GIS) environment to investigate the palaeo-hydrography in a sector of the Magra River alluvial plain (north-western Italy) where the famous ruins of the Roman colony of Luna (now Luni) are located. The approach proposed here combines the results obtained by different remote sensing images (satellite and airborne photos) with the data derived from historical cartography and recent field surveys. The traces are mapped and organised in two vector databases organised in linear or polygonal features consistent with fluvial elements (e.g. palaeo-channels, abandoned streams, etc.) and marshy/swamp areas, respectively. This database represents a useful starting point that can be implemented by further more detailed studies aimed to better understand the evolution of the landscape and the possible relationship with the story of the archaeological site of Luna about which many questions are still unresolved.


Bollettino Della Societa Geologica Italiana | 2012

New insights on the Holocene marine transgression in the Bahía Camarones (Chubut, Argentina)

Giovanni Zanchetta; I. Consoloni; Ilaria Isola; Marta Pappalardo; Adriano Ribolini; Marina Laura Aguirre; Enrique Fucks; Ilaria Baneschi; Monica Bini; Luca Ragaini; F. Terrasi; Gabriella Boretto

The stratigraphic reconstruction of the northern sector of the Bahia Camarones (Chubut, Argentina) allowed to improve our understanding of the Holocene marine transgression in the area.The first phase of the maximum of the transgression, is interpreted as dominated by the high rate of eustatic rise of sea level until ca. 6-7 ka BP possibly associated to sedimentary starvation as suggested by fossil accumulation. After this first phase, the general trend indicates a progressive fall of the relative sea level after the Middle Holocene high stand as documented in other parts of south America Atlantic coast. Our data, coupled with the robust radiocarbondata set available for the area from literature, indicate three main local steps of coastal aggradation between ca. 6600 and 5400 yr BP (ca. 7000-5600 yr cal BP), ca. 3300 and 2000 yr BP (ca. 3100-1700 yr cal BP), and ca. 1300-500 yr BP (ca. 1000-300 yr cal BP). A significant age gap in coastal aggradation is present between ca. 5300 and 4400 yr BP (ca. 5600-4500 yr cal BP), and perhaps between ca 2000 and 1300 yr BP (ca. 1700-1000 yr cal BP). These can be linked to phases of local sea level fall and/or phases of sedimentary starvation and/or changes in drift transport which can have produced local coastal cannibalization. However, no conclusive data can be advanced. Data obtained from careful measurements of sea level markers represented by the top of marsh and fluvial terraces indicate lower values for the sea level estimation compared with the data set previously proposed for the area. This stigmatizes the fact that field-oriented works are still the priority in the Patagonia coast along with accurate age measurement, especially for obtaining the fundamental information we need for predicting the environmental impact, in these coastal areas, from accelerate sea level rise as effect of global warming.


The Holocene | 2014

Middle- to late-Holocene relative sea-level changes at Puerto Deseado (Patagonia, Argentina)

Giovanni Zanchetta; Monica Bini; Ilaria Isola; Marta Pappalardo; Adriano Ribolini; I. Consoloni; Gabriella Boretto; Enrique Fucks; Luca Ragaini; F. Terrasi

Stratigraphic, morphologic and radiocarbon data from Puerto Deseado coastal area (Santa Cruz Province, Argentina) indicate that the Holocene coastline formed in response to the discontinuous aggradation of coarse gravely beaches since c. 6300 cal. yr BP related to a progressive falling of relative sea level. Beach ridge crests crudely approximate to the sea level showing at least three steps of aggradation and relative sea-level lowering. Two inactive abrasive notches at c. 7.9 and 3.4 m a.s.l. have recorded this sea-level trend, suggesting two important phases when sea level was stationary. This allows the estimation of a rate of relative sea-level fall in the last c. 3500 years of c. 1.8 mm/yr. Moreover, notches and morphological data indicate that the crest of the beach ridges exceeded the sea-level height by c. 2 ± 0.5 m. This value provides a reasonable regional estimate to be applied to produce comparable relative sea-level curve for Atlantic Patagonia coast.


Journal of the Geological Society | 2018

An Oldest Dryas glacier expansion on Mount Pelister (Former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia) according to 10Be cosmogenic dating

Adriano Ribolini; Monica Bini; Ilaria Isola; Matteo Spagnolo; Giovanni Zanchetta; Ramón Pellitero; S. Mechernich; Raphael Gromig; Tibor J. Dunai; Bernd Wagner; Ivica Milevski

We provide a geomorphological analysis of a glacial valley on Mount Pelister, in Macedonia. Three boulders from a frontal moraine were dated with the cosmogenic nuclide isotope 10Be. The results demonstrate that the boulders have been exposed since 15.24 ± 0.85 ka. This age constrains the formation of the frontal moraine to the Oldest Dryas cold event. This age fits with that of other glacier deposits dated to the Older Dryas in the Alps, Balkans, Carpathians and Turkish mountains. The Pelister palaeoglacier has been reconstructed and its equilibrium line altitude extracted, returning a value of 2250 m a.s.l. This is in good agreement with the equilibrium line altitudes of most other reconstructed glaciers of the same age in the circum-Mediterranean mountains, demonstrating a comparable response to the Oldest Dryas event. Other palaeoenvironmental records near the Pelister mountain indicate that the Older Dryas was here characterized by a cold and remarkably dry event. The temporal relationship between Older Dryas glacier advances in the Balkan region and recorded changes in the Atlantic thermohaline circulation during the Laurentide Ice Sheet massive ice discharge (H1 event) confirms the strong climatic link between the pan-Mediterranean regions and the North Atlantic Ocean. Supplementary material: Geochemical laboratory results are available at http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3830254


Geografia Fisica E Dinamica Quaternaria | 2011

GLACIAL FEATURES ON THE GALICICA MOUNTAINS, MACEDONIA: PRELIMINARY REPORT

Adriano Ribolini; Ilaria Isola; Giovanni Zanchetta; Monica Bini; Roberto Sulpizio

RIBOLINI A., ISOLA I., ZANCHETTA G., BINI M. & SULPI- ZIO R., Glacial features on the Galicica Mountains, Macedonia: preliminary report. (IT ISSN 0391-9839, 2011). Glacial features were described for the first time on the Galicia Moun- tains, a mountain range separating the lakes of Ohrid and Prespa in Mace- donia. The geomorphological mapping of part of this range allowed to document the existence of frontal and lateral moraines, as well as trimlines, cirques and polished rocks. These glacial features allowed the reconstruc- tion of the original topography of the glaciers that deposited the frontal moraines. The Equilibrium Line Altitude (ELA) of three different phases of expansion was calculated (ca. 1850 m, ca. 2000 m and 2130 m a.s.l.) through the Area-Altitude Balance Ratio (AABR) method, and correlated with the values available for the Balkan region and northern Greece. An at- tribution to Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and Lateglacial (Oldest and Younger Dryas) was argued for the glacial phases of Galicica Mountains, in agreement with the ELAs of dated moraines in the region, as well as in the Apennines and Maritime Alps. Through the extrapolation of summer tem- peratures at the ELAs for the single glacial phases, the amount of precipita- tion needed to sustain the glaciers existence was calculated (3500-3700 mm of weq) using a well established polynomial regression. The attribution to the LGM of the lowermost frontal moraine points out to an older age for the till found well below the examined area, near the Prespa Lake shore. This indicates that a more extended glaciation phase occurred during the Middle Pleistocene.


Remote Sensing | 2018

Identification of Leveled Archeological Mounds (Höyük) in the Alluvial Plain of the Ceyhan River (Southern Turkey) by Satellite Remote-Sensing Analyses

Monica Bini; Ilaria Isola; Giovanni Zanchetta; Adriano Ribolini; Andrea Ciampalini; Ilaria Baneschi; Daniela Mele; Anna Lucia D'Agata

The alluvial plain of the Ceyhan River (SE Turkey) has been populated since the Neolithic. In 1954, Marjory Veronica Seton-Williams described for this area several archeological mounds (hoyuk), which are the remains of ancient settlements. Today, according to the archeological research carried out in the area, some of these mounds result to have been leveled by agricultural activities. In this work, we identified many color anomalies by low-cost remote-sensing analyses of satellite images. We checked the nature of these anomalies in a dedicated survey and we found a good correspondence between color anomalies and archeological remains consistent with leveled hoyuk. We compared the grain size and chemical characteristics of the soil collected inside the color anomalies with the soil collected in other areas of the alluvial plain. We found irrelevant differences in grain-size characteristics, but a higher content of CaCO3 in soils collected inside the anomalies with respect to those collected outside. Therefore, the content of CaCO3 could be considered the feature that makes the color anomalies visible. The reason for this higher content of CaCO3 is related to the anthropogenic material used in the different phases of hoyuk growth. This work suggests a low-cost analysis useful for rapid identification and preservation of archeological information on the history of Mediterranean settlement.


Geografiska Annaler Series A-physical Geography | 2014

Late-pleistocene wedge structures along the patagonian coast (argentina): Chronological constraints and palaeo-environmental implications

Adriano Ribolini; Monica Bini; I. Consoloni; Ilaria Isola; Marta Pappalardo; Giovanni Zanchetta; Enrique Fucks; Laura Panzeri; M. Martini; F. Terrasi

Abstract This paper investigates several wedge structures formed in continental deposits covering marine sediments deposited during 5 along the central Patagonian coast of rgentina. The size and surface microtexture characteristics of the infilling sediments are consistent with a depositional environment dominated by aeolian transport. Fragments of Andean volcanic rocks (glass shards) in the wedge‐fill suggest long‐distance transport via a westerly component of wind direction. The wedges are interpreted as products of deep seasonal frost action in frozen ground, which produced open cracks that filled rapidly with partially non‐local aeolian sediments. Many wedges cross cut carbonate crusts that formed under permafrost conditions in coastal Patagonia. The radiocarbon dating of carbonate crusts yielded an age of 25–27 kyr bp, while wedge‐fill sediments are OSL dated to 14-670 ± 750 yr bp. This indicates that ground wedge formation occurred during a cold event (the Antarctic Cold Reversal period) that interrupted the permafrost degradation following the Last Glacial Maximum.


The Holocene | 2017

Assessing tectonic subsidence from estimates of Holocene relative sea-level change: An example from the NW Mediterranean (Magra Plain, Italy)

Alessandro Chelli; Marta Pappalardo; Monica Bini; Helmut Brückner; Giorgio Neri; Michele Neri; Giorgio Spada

New sedimentological sea-level indicators are presented from the River Magra coastal plain, in NW Italy. Chronologically well-constrained paralic peats and organic sediments which had been deposited in a defined relationship with sea level were recovered in four of the seven boreholes considered in this work. Their evolution scatters in the time span of the past 6000 years. Since the cores are located within a single sedimentary basin, it was possible to correct the elevation of marker horizons for the effect of sediment compaction by means of both a field and a geotechnical method. Thus, seven reliable index points for the mid- to late-Holocene sea-level rise were obtained. The age–depth model derived from them was compared with that of sea-level predictions from two different Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) models available for the area. In both cases, the modelled sea-level estimates overlie the index points, suggesting lower relative sea-level elevation than the one predicted considering the combined eustatic and hydro-isostatic components. Based on the general tectonic setting of the area, this finding was interpreted as the effect of a tectonic subsidence of the basin, the rate of which can be quantified on average as 0.5 mm/yr since the middle Holocene, with a sharp increase after 2500 yr BP. By providing a reliable estimate of the rate of tectonic subsidence in a coastal area of NW Italy, this research contributes to refining the geodynamic model of this part of the Mediterranean basin.

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Enrique Fucks

National University of La Plata

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