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Title: Modern coral reefs of western Atlantic: new geological perspective

Abstract

Contrary to popular belief of the late 1960s, western Atlantic Holocene reefs have a long history and are not feeble novice nearshore veneers that barely survived postglacial temperatures. Rather, the growth of these reefs kept pace with the rising seas of the Holocene transgression and their development was, for the most part, controlled by offshore wave-energy conditions and the relationship between changing sea levels and local shelf topography. Thus, the outer shelves of the eastern Caribbean in areas of high energy have relict reefs consisting predominantly of Acropora palmata, a robust shallow-water coral. The flooding of adjacent shelves during the postglacial transgression introduced stress conditions that terminated the growth of these reefs. When, about 7000 yr ago, shelf-water conditions improved, scattered deeper water coral communities reestablished themselves on these stranded shelf-edge reefs, and fringing and bank-barrier reefs began to flourish in shallow coastal areas. At the same time, the fragile and rapidly growing Acropora cervicornis and other corals flourished at greater depths on the more protected shelves of the western Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. As a result, late Holocene buildups more than 30 m thick developed in those areas. 7 figures.

Authors:
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (USA)
OSTI Identifier:
6145192
Resource Type:
Journal Article
Journal Name:
AAPG (Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol.) Bull.; (United States)
Additional Journal Information:
Journal Volume: 72:11
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
58 GEOSCIENCES; ATLANTIC OCEAN; REEFS; DEPOSITION; CORALS; CNIDARIA; GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES; SEAS; SURFACE WATERS; 580100* - Geology & Hydrology- (-1989)

Citation Formats

MacIntyre, I G. Modern coral reefs of western Atlantic: new geological perspective. United States: N. p., 1988. Web.
MacIntyre, I G. Modern coral reefs of western Atlantic: new geological perspective. United States.
MacIntyre, I G. 1988. "Modern coral reefs of western Atlantic: new geological perspective". United States.
@article{osti_6145192,
title = {Modern coral reefs of western Atlantic: new geological perspective},
author = {MacIntyre, I G},
abstractNote = {Contrary to popular belief of the late 1960s, western Atlantic Holocene reefs have a long history and are not feeble novice nearshore veneers that barely survived postglacial temperatures. Rather, the growth of these reefs kept pace with the rising seas of the Holocene transgression and their development was, for the most part, controlled by offshore wave-energy conditions and the relationship between changing sea levels and local shelf topography. Thus, the outer shelves of the eastern Caribbean in areas of high energy have relict reefs consisting predominantly of Acropora palmata, a robust shallow-water coral. The flooding of adjacent shelves during the postglacial transgression introduced stress conditions that terminated the growth of these reefs. When, about 7000 yr ago, shelf-water conditions improved, scattered deeper water coral communities reestablished themselves on these stranded shelf-edge reefs, and fringing and bank-barrier reefs began to flourish in shallow coastal areas. At the same time, the fragile and rapidly growing Acropora cervicornis and other corals flourished at greater depths on the more protected shelves of the western Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. As a result, late Holocene buildups more than 30 m thick developed in those areas. 7 figures.},
doi = {},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6145192}, journal = {AAPG (Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol.) Bull.; (United States)},
number = ,
volume = 72:11,
place = {United States},
year = {Tue Nov 01 00:00:00 EST 1988},
month = {Tue Nov 01 00:00:00 EST 1988}
}