Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4466609 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2013 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A Hettangian outcrop containing fossil coral beds is described (location: Scotland).•The coral assemblage is constituted by a unique species: Lepidophyllia murchisoni.•The corals have a peculiar bifacial growth pattern.•The corals did not live in ideal environmental conditions.•The different coral beds could represent successive attempts at reefal settlement.

At Ob Lusa (Isle of Skye, Scotland), six distinct coral beds were observed in a modern outcrop where a Hettangian succession is exposed. The coral associations are monogenic, belonging to Lepidophyllia, a massive cerioid genus. The lowest bed has relatively well-developed colonies that form small bioconstructions, whereas the other beds have small and dispersed colonies that are completely drowned in the matrix. Their morphology and size can vary, but the general growth fabric is dominated by platy colonies. This type of growth fabric is defined as a platestone. The most surprising characteristic of these specimens, especially for the platy corals, is their growth pattern; many samples do not exhibit the classical growth polarity because they are bifacial. Geochemical analyses (δ180, δ13C) were conducted on oyster shells that were associated with the corals. The results indicate that the mean palaeotemperature was approximately 22 °C. Sedimentological analysis revealed shallow settings where the hydrodynamic energy and siliciclastic inputs fluctuated. The general faunal assemblage of the outcrop had low diversity and was mainly composed of allochthonous bioclasts. The corals at Ob Lusa clearly did not live under ideal environmental conditions for the development of corals.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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