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Coralline algae indicate Pleistocene evolution from deep,open platform to outer barrier reef environments in the northern Great Barrier Reef margin
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Juan?C?BragaEmail author  Julio?Aguirre
Institution:(1) Departamento de Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, Campus Fuentenueva s/n, 18002 Granada, Spain
Abstract:Coralline algae from a drill core in Ribbon Reef 5 have been used to interpret changes in the depositional palaeoenvironments in the northern Australian Great Barrier Reef over the last 790 ka. Three main coralline algal assemblages, each dominated by members of a particular subfamily, have been distinguished by quantitative analysis: (1) mastophoroid assemblages, usually occurring as crusts on corals, are typical of the shallowest reef settings; (2) lithophylloid assemblages within algal nodules may represent shallow-water, cooler environments or deeper reef subenvironments; and (3) melobesioid assemblages are characteristic of deeper-water platform areas. The algal assemblages between 96 and 210 m b.s.f. (metre below sea floor) record a fluctuating but progressive shallowing-upwards from deep, outer-platform to shallower, non-reefal depositional environments. Two intervening episodes dominated by mastophoroids represent two phases of reef growth. The section above 96 m b.s.f. comprises several stacked reefs in which mastophoroid crusts similar to the present-day shallow-water assemblages predominate.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at .Communicated by: Geological Editor P.K. Swart
Keywords:Coralline algae  Quaternary  Great Barrier Reef  Australia
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