Physics
Scientific paper
Aug 2010
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2010georl..3715602w&link_type=abstract
Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 37, Issue 15, CiteID L15602
Physics
1
Oceanography: General: Coral Reef Systems (4916), Global Change: Sea Level Change (1222, 1225, 4556), Paleoceanography: Abrupt/Rapid Climate Change (1605), Global Change: Abrupt/Rapid Climate Change (4901, 8408), Geographic Location: Pacific Ocean
Scientific paper
Coral reefs track sea level and are particularly sensitive to changes in climate. Reefs are threatened by global warming, with many experiencing increased coral bleaching. Warmer sea surface temperatures might enable reef expansion into mid latitudes. Here we report multibeam sonar and coring that reveal an extensive relict coral reef around Lord Howe Island, which is fringed by the southernmost reef in the Pacific Ocean. The relict reef, in water depths of 25-50 m, flourished in early Holocene and covered an area more than 20 times larger than the modern reef. Radiocarbon and uranium-series dating indicates that corals grew between 9000 and 7000 years ago. The reef was subsequently drowned, and backstepped to its modern limited extent. This relict reef, with localised re-establishment of corals in the past three millennia, could become a substrate for reef expansion in response to warmer temperatures, anticipated later this century and beyond, if corals are able to recolonise its surface.
Brooke Brendan P.
Buchanan Cameron
Hua Quan
Jones Brian G.
Kennedy David M.
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