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Geology; October, 2007; v. 35; no. 10; p. 899-902; DOI: 10.1130/G24034A.1
© 2007 Geological Society of America
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Changes in coral-reef structure through the Miocene in the Mediterranean province: Adaptive versus environmental influence

Luis Pomar1 and Pamela Hallock2

1 Universitat de les Illes Balears, Departamento de Ciencies de la Terra, E-07122 Palma de Mallorca, Spain
2 University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, 140 7th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, USA

Well-documented Mediterranean examples of Miocene carbonate platforms, with complete exposures from shallow-water to basinal facies, provide evidence for temporal changes in reef-building capacity of zooxanthellate corals. In pre–late Tortonian platforms, small coralgal patches and mounds occur from platform top to the toe of slope, but they did not build to sea level. In contrast, barrier reefs with unequivocal reef-crest structures that reached sea level are documented in late Tortonian–early Messinian platforms. We suggest that a change in both calcification rates and bathymetric zonation was the result of coevolution of corals and Symbiodinium zooxanthellae, coeval to global cooling and, at least at a regional scale, a geochemical change that supported widespread aragonite precipitation through the late Miocene.

Key Words: coral • reef • Miocene • Mediterranean • zooxanthellae







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