Shallow-buried Pleistocene Madrepora-dominated coral mounds on a muddy continental slope, Tuscan Archipelago, NE Tyrrhenian Sea
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
Subfossil azoxanthellate deep-sea coral mounds occur at 355410 m on the continental slope of the NE Tyrrhenian Sea between Gorgona and Capraia islands, Tuscan Archipelago. These low-relief patch reefs are at present buried by a thin muddy drape. Their age is latest Pleistocene. The colonial scleractinian Madrepora oculata is the major frame builder, in association with the solitary coral Desmophyllum dianthus and the colonial coral Lophelia pertusa. These NE Tyrrhenian Madrepora-dominated coral mounds represent one of the few known Mediterranean examples of deep-coral colonization of a muddy, low-gradient continental slope.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Deep coral mound; Mediterranean Sea; Pleistocene; Madrepora
List of contributors:
Remia, Alessandro; Taviani, Marco
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