Kaoru Kashima
Kyushu University
46 Papers
438 Citations
Kaoru Kashima is an academic researcher from Kyushu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Sea level. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 43 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
An earthquake history derived from stratigraphic and microfossil evidence of relative sea-level change at Coos Bay, southern coastal Oregon
TL;DR: In this article, a sequence of interbedded peaty and muddy intertidal sediment beneath a small, protected tidal marsh in a narrow inlet of Coos Bay, Oregon, records ten rapid to instantaneous rises in relative sea level.
125
•Journal Article
Diatom zonation in southern Oregon tidal marshes relative to vascular plants, foraminifera, and sea level
Alan R. Nelson,Kaoru Kashima +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that modern mudflat, low marsh, and high marsh zones can be distinguished from one another with diatom assemblage data at three silty transects in the middle parts of two river-dominated estuaries.
115
Seventeenth-century uplift in eastern Hokkaido, Japan
Brian F. Atwater,Ryuta Furukawa,Eileen Hemphill-Haley,Yasutaka Ikeda,Kaoru Kashima,Kumiko Kawase,Harvey M. Kelsey,Andrew Moore,Futoshi Nanayama,Yuichi Nishimura,Satoko Odagiri,Yoko Ota,Sun-Cheon Park,Kenji Satake,Yuki Sawai,Koichi Shimokawa +15 more
TL;DR: The uplifted area extended at least 50km along the southern Kuril Trench as mentioned in this paper and included the estuaries Akkeshi-ko and Hichirippu.
66
Reconstruction of climatic changes during the Late Pleistocene, based on sediment records from the Konya Basin (Central Anatolia, Turkey)
Catherine Kuzucuoğlu,Jacques Bertaux,Stuart Black,Michele Denefle,Michel Fontugne,Mustafa Karabıyıkoğlu,Kaoru Kashima,Nicole Limondin-Lozouet,Damase Mouralis,Paul Orth +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used three sediment cores from the Konya plain, a now dry, closed and semi-arid lacustrine basin at 1000 m altitude in central Anatolia, Turkey.
Environmental and climatic changes during the last 20,000 years at Lake Tuz, central Turkey
TL;DR: In this article, a detailed analysis of lake-side terraces and alluvial fans was performed to identify fluctuations of climate characteristics such as precipitation and evaporation rates, and local conditions for water balance changes in the central part of Turkey during the last 20,000 years.
60