New Study: Brazil’s Relative Sea Level Was 2+ Meters Higher and SSTs 3-4°C Warmer 6000 Years Ago

Panoramic view of a vibrant beach city with a sandy coastline, lush greenery, and mountains in the background under a bright blue sky.

From No Trick Zone

By Kenneth Richard

Across the globe, vermetid gastropods (shelled snails, or molluscs) are a “critical paleo-sea level indicator” for ancient coastline reconstructions (Angulo et al., 2026).

Along the Brazilian coast, vermetid shell radiocarbon ages indicate the relative sea level (RSL) was “more than 2 m above present” between 6000 and 7000 years ago. (The charts shown in the study suggest RSL was 3 to 3.5 m higher than today during this period.)

Today’s latitudinal warmth threshold for living vermetid gastropod colonies along the coasts of Brazil is 22-23°S. This is over 5° (550-600 km) north of this species’ warmth threshold (28-29°S) throughout the period when there were “warmer waters during the Holocene climatic optimum.”

Since it is well established that sea surface temperatures decrease by approximately 0.5°C to 1°C for every degree of latitude moving poleward from the tropics, carbon-dated vermetid gastropod presence informs us that this region’s sea surface temperatures were about 3-4°C warmer than today throughout this Early- to Mid-Holocene period.

A scientific article discussing the ages of shell species related to vermetid bioconstructions and their implications for sea-level changes in Brazil, featuring maps, figures, and graphs related to the research findings.
Image Source: Angulo et al., 2026


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