Abstract: Hurricane Control on Modern Reef Development.

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
Author(s):  
BLANCHON, PAUL, Dept. of Geological
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander B. Modys ◽  
◽  
Lauren T. Toth ◽  
Richard A. Mortlock ◽  
Anton E. Oleinik

1998 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 957-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik H. Meesters ◽  
Rolf P. M. Bak ◽  
Susie Westmacott ◽  
Mark Ridgley ◽  
Steve Dollar

Author(s):  
Gijs G. Hendrickx ◽  
Peter M.J. Herman ◽  
Jasper T. Dijkstra ◽  
Curt D. Storlazzi ◽  
Lauren T. Toth
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.C. Pretorius ◽  
T.B. Hoareau

AbstractMolecular clock calibration is central in population genetics as it provides an accurate inference of demographic history, whereby helping with the identification of driving factors of population changes in an ecosystem. This is particularly important for coral reef species that are seriously threatened globally and in need of conservation. Biogeographic events and fossils are the main source of calibration, but these are known to overestimate timing and parameters at population level, which leads to a disconnection between environmental changes and inferred reconstructions. Here, we propose the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) calibration that is based on the assumptions that reef species went through a bottleneck during the LGM, which was followed by an early yet marginal increase in population size. We validated the LGM calibration using simulations and genetic inferences based on Extended Bayesian Skyline Plots. Applying it to mitochondrial sequence data of crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster spp., we obtained mutation rates that were higher than phylogenetically based calibrations and varied among populations. The timing of the greatest increase in population size differed slightly among populations, but all started between 10 and 20 kya. Using a curve-fitting method, we showed that Acanthaster populations were more influenced by sea-level changes in the Indian Ocean and by reef development in the Pacific Ocean. Our results illustrate that the LGM calibration is robust and can probably provide accurate demographic inferences in many reef species. Application of this calibration has the potential to help identify population drivers that are central for the conservation and management of these threatened ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Prendergast

Abstract The Kapalagulu intrusion in eastern Tanzania hosts a major, 420-m-thick, stratiform/stratabound platinum group element (PGE)-bearing sulfide zone—the Lubalisi reef—within a prominent, chromititiferous, harzburgite unit close to its stratigraphic base. Several features of the vertical base and precious metal distributions (in a composite stratigraphic section based upon two deep exploration drill holes) display similarities to those of offset-type PGE reefs that formed under the overall control of Rayleigh fractionation: (1) composite layering (at several scales) defined by systematic vertical variations of sulfide and precious metal contents and intermetallic ratios, indicating repeated cycles of PGE enrichment and depletion in the order Pd-Pt-Au-Cu, and (2) in the lower part of the reef, stratigraphic offsets of the precious metal peaks below peak sulfide (Cu) content. The form and geochemistry of the reef are consistent with overturns of basal liquid layers within a liquid layering system (i.e., stable density-driven stratification of a magma chamber), plus at least two minor inputs of parental magma during which the resident magma was recharged with sulfur and metals, and the effective depletion of precious metals in the magma midway through reef development. The Lubalisi reef differs from classic offset-type PGE reefs, however, principally because individual Pd, Pt, and Au enrichment peaks are coincident, not offset. The reef is set apart from other offset-type PGE reefs in three additional ways: (1) its association with olivine cumulates that crystallized soon after initial magma emplacement and well below the first appearance of cumulus pyroxene or plagioclase (implying attainment of sulfide saturation and precious metal enrichment without prolonged concentration of sulfur and chalcophile metals by normal magma cooling and differentiation), (2) the probable role of chromite crystallization in not only triggering sulfide segregation during reef formation but also facilitating precious metal enrichment in the early stages of reef development, and (3) its great width. The early stage of fractionation may also help explain the coincident precious metal peaks through its effect on apparent precious metal partition coefficients.


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