James, Noel P. et al. (2000): Quaternary bryozoan reef mounds in cool-water, upper slope environments; Great Australian Bight

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 182
ODP 182 1129
ODP 182 1131
Identifier:
2000-056023
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(2000)028<0647:QBRMIC>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
James, Noel P.
Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada
author

Feary, David A.
Australian Geological Survey Organization, Australia
author

Surlyk, Finn
University of Copenhagen, Denmark
author

Simo, J. A. Toni
University of Wisconsin, United States
author

Betzler, Christian
Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitaet, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Holbourn, Ann E.
Kiel University, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Li, Qianyu
University of Adelaide, Australia
author

Matsuda, Hiroki
Kumamoto University, Japan
author

Machiyama, Hideaki
Japan Marine Science and Technology Center, Japan
author

Brooks, Gregg R.
Eckerd College, United States
author

Andres, Miriam S.
ETH-Zentrum, Switzerland
author

Hine, Albert C.
University of South Florida, United States
author

Malone, Mitchell J.
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Identification:
Quaternary bryozoan reef mounds in cool-water, upper slope environments; Great Australian Bight
2000
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
28
7
647-650
Bryozoan reef mounds are common features in the geological record, occurring within mid-ramp, slope paleoenvironments, especially in Paleozoic carbonate successions, but until now have not been recorded from the modern ocean. Recent scientific drilling in the Great Australian Bight (Ocean Drilling Program Leg 182) has confirmed the existence of shallow subsurface bryozoan reef mounds in modern water depths of 200-350 m. These structures have as much as 65 m of synoptic relief, and occur both as single mounds and as mound complexes. They are unlithified, have a floatstone texture, and are rich in delicate branching, encrusting and/or nodular-arborescent, flat-robust branching, fenestrate, and articulated zooidal bryozoan growth forms. The muddy matrix is composed of foraminifers, serpulids, fecal pellets, irregular bioclasts, sponge spicules, and calcareous nannofossils. The (super 14) C accelerator mass spectrometry dates of 26.6-35.1 ka indicate that the most recent mounds, the tops of which are 7-10 m below the modern seafloor, flourished during the last glacial lowstand but perished during transgressive sea-level rise. This history reflects changing oceanographic current patterns; strong upwelling during lowstands, and reduced upwelling and lowered trophic resources during highstands. Large specimens of benthic foraminifers restricted to the mounds confirm overall mesotrophic growth conditions. The mounds are similar in geometry, scale, general composition, and paleoenvironments to older structures, but lack obvious microbial influence and extensive synsedimentary cementation. Such differences reflect either short-term local conditions or long-term temporal changes in ocean chemistry and biology.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-33.1000
West:128.3000East: 128.3000
South:-33.3000

Quaternary geology; absolute age; algae; biogenic structures; bioherms; Bryozoa; C-14; carbon; carbonate sediments; Cenozoic; continental slope; dates; fecal pellets; Foraminifera; glacial environment; glaciomarine environment; Great Australian Bight; Indian Ocean; inner slope; interglacial environment; Invertebrata; isotopes; Leg 182; marine environment; marine sediments; morphology; nannofossils; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1129; ODP Site 1131; paleo-oceanography; paleocurrents; paleoecology; Plantae; Pleistocene; Polychaetia; Porifera; Protista; Quaternary; radioactive isotopes; reef builders; reef environment; sea-level changes; sedimentary structures; sediments; Serpulidae; shallow-water environment; slope environment; spicules; trophic analysis; upper Pleistocene; Vermes;

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