2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2010.11.005
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Variation in deglacial coralgal assemblages and their paleoenvironmental significance: IODP Expedition 310, “Tahiti Sea Level”

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Cited by 52 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
(84 reference statements)
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“…The Holocene Puhia fringing reef exhibits a zonation with a landward Pocillopora and lagoonward Acropora coralgal assemblage. While both assemblages presumably occurred in shallow water (0 to 10 m), as additionally indicated by the commonly found thick crusts of P. onkodes , vermetids and Homotrema , the acroporid corals are characteristic of a more open setting and the pocilloporids of a somewhat more protected environment (Abbey et al ., ). The curious thick, vertically oriented coralline algal crusts in the Puhia cores are dominated by taxa that typically occur in poorly illuminated settings, which usually occur in deeper reef areas or in shaded habitats, such as crevices or caves.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The Holocene Puhia fringing reef exhibits a zonation with a landward Pocillopora and lagoonward Acropora coralgal assemblage. While both assemblages presumably occurred in shallow water (0 to 10 m), as additionally indicated by the commonly found thick crusts of P. onkodes , vermetids and Homotrema , the acroporid corals are characteristic of a more open setting and the pocilloporids of a somewhat more protected environment (Abbey et al ., ). The curious thick, vertically oriented coralline algal crusts in the Puhia cores are dominated by taxa that typically occur in poorly illuminated settings, which usually occur in deeper reef areas or in shaded habitats, such as crevices or caves.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is not entirely clear why there is a Porites-dominated assemblage seaward of the Pocillopora-dominated assemblage, which is a zonation different from that observed in the overlying Holocene fringing reef. Porites is considered as being indicative of either deeper water or more turbid conditions (Abbey et al, 2011). Siliciclastic input was presumably somewhat greater in the more landward setting of core Puhia 1.…”
Section: Pleistocene Fringing Reef Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nature and environmental significance of the identified coralgal assemblages are described in detail in Abbey et al . () and Camoin et al . ().…”
Section: Last Deglacial Reef Sequencesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The lithology and the biological composition of the recovered reef sequences are based on detailed analyses of 264 core samples, digital core images and 180 thin sections. The environmental interpretation of coralgal communities and associated reef-dwelling organisms recovered in cores is based on the ecological distribution of their modern counterparts (Cabioch et al, 1999a;Montaggioni, 2005;Abbey et al, 2011). An accurate chronology of the reef development has been obtained through the radiometric dating of corals and coralline algal crusts (46 corals and 17 coralline algae; Camoin et al, 2012;Deschamps et al, 2012), and the reef development history is described in detail by Camoin et al (2012).…”
Section: Data Setmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; Abbey et al . ). The combination of paleoenvironmental interpretations of fossil reef communities and radioisotope dating is a key to reconstructing past sea levels (Fairbanks ; Chappell & Polach ; Cabioch et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%