Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4696528 | Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2010 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
After the mass-extinction at the K/T boundary, reef-building scleractinian corals were absent in the Boreal early Danian in the Danish basin. Faunal evolution after the biotic crisis and a rise in relative sea level are interpreted to have favoured formation of deep-water coral reefs in the Ãresund region in mid-Danian time. The reefs were 6-20 m high and 20-200 m long on the seafloor and have a patchy distribution within a bryozoan mound-dominated setting in an area of about 10 km2. They are composed of the framework-building ahermatypic scleractinian coral Dendrophyllia candelabrum with minor occurrences of bryozoans, echinoderms, gastropods and bivalves. It has been suspected that the reefs were located over contemporaneous seafloor highs but this notion was only based on comparison with similar modern deep-water reefs offshore Norway. The data from Ãresund indicate that the Danian reef complex was formed over a late Maastrichtian palaeo-seafloor high, the Saltholm-Malmø High, supporting this interpretation and thus adding fundamentally to the understanding of the factors controlling the formation and localisation of these deep and cool-water coral reefs. Individual reefs were initiated and grew on eroded crests and steep south-dipping flanks of bryozoan mounds and were predominantly situated on the southern part of the high and are interpreted as growing towards NW-flowing bottom currents rich in particulate nutrients.
Keywords
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Economic Geology
Authors
Morten Bjerager, Finn Surlyk, Holger Lykke-Andersen, Nicolas Thibault, Lars Stemmerik,