James, Noel P. et al. (2004): Origin of late Pleistocene bryozoan reef mounds; Great Australian Bight

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 182
Identifier:
2006-010055
georefid

10.1306/062303740020
doi

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

Feary, David A.
Geoscience Australia, Australia
author

Betzler, Christian
Hamburg University, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Bone, Yvonne
Adelaide University, Australia
author

Holbourn, Ann E.
Christian-Albrechts University, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Li, Qianyu
Japan Marine Science and Technology Center, Japan
author

Machiyama, Hideaki
University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States
author

Simo, J. A. Toni
University of Copenhagen, Denmark
author

Surlyk, Finn
author

Identification:
Origin of late Pleistocene bryozoan reef mounds; Great Australian Bight
2004
Journal of Sedimentary Research
Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Tulsa, OK, United States
74
1
20-48
Bryozoan-rich biogenic mounds grew periodically on the prograding carbonate slope of the central Great Australian Bight throughout Pliocene-Pleistocene time. Cores from three ODP Leg 182 drill sites provide a record of mound growth during the last 300,000 years over a stratigraphic thickness of approximately 150 m. These mounds, the first such structures described from the modern ocean, grew between paleodepths of 100 and 240 m; we infer that the upper limit of growth was established by swell wave base, and the lower boundary was fixed by an oligotrophic water mass. Detailed chronostratigraphy, based on radiometric and U-series dating, benthic foraminifer stable-isotope stratigraphy, and planktonic foraminifer abundance ratios, confirms that buildups flourished during glacial lowstands (even-numbered marine isotope stages) but were largely moribund during interglacial highstands and are not extant today. Mound floatstones are compositionally a mixture of in situ bryozoans comprising 96 genera and characterized by fenestrate, flat robust branching, encrusting, nodular-arborescent, and delicate branching growth forms. The packstone matrix comprises autochthonous and allochthonous sand-size bryozoans, benthic and planktonic foraminifers, serpulids, coralline algae, sponge spicules, peloids, and variable glauconite and quartz grains, together with mud-size ostracods, tunicate spicules, bioeroded sponge chips, and coccoliths. Intermound, allochthonous packstone and local grainstone contain similar particles, but they are conspicuously worn, abraded, blackened, and bioeroded. An integrated model of mound accretion during sea-level lowstands begins with delicate branching bryozoan floatstone that increases in bryozoan abundance and diversity upward over a thickness of 5-10 m, culminating in thin intervals of grainstone characterized by reduced diversity and locally abraded fossils. Mound accumulation was relatively rapid (30-67 cm/ky) and locally punctuated by rudstones and firmgrounds. Intermound highstand deposition was comparatively slow (17-25 cm/ky) and typified by meter-scale, fining-upward packages of packstone and grainstone or burrowed packstone, with local firm-grounds overlain by characteristically abraded particles. Mound growth during glacial periods is interpreted to have resulted from increased nutrient supply and enhanced primary productivity. Such elevated trophic resources were both regional and local, and thought to be focused in this area by cessation of Leeuwin Current flow, together with northward movement of the subtropical convergence and related dynamic mixing.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-33.1720
West:127.1500East: 128.5500
South:-34.2330

Quaternary geology; Bryozoa; carbonate rocks; Cenozoic; chronostratigraphy; floatstone; grainstone; Great Australian Bight; Indian Ocean; Invertebrata; Leg 182; lithostratigraphy; mounds; Ocean Drilling Program; packstone; Pleistocene; Quaternary; reef builders; reefs; rudstone; sedimentary rocks; unconformities; upper Pleistocene;

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