Published November 17, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Current and sea level control the demise of shallow carbonate production on a tropical bank (Saya de Malha Bank, Indian Ocean)

  • 1. University of Hamburg
  • 2. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • 3. Universidad de Granada
  • 4. University of Malta
  • 5. Maritime Zones Administration and Exploration, Mauritius

Description

Carbonate platforms are built mainly by corals living in shallow light-saturated tropical waters. The Saya de Malha Bank (Indian Ocean), one of the world's largest carbonate platforms, lies in the path of the South Equatorial Current. Its reefs do not reach sea level, and all carbonate production is mesophotic to oligophotic. New geological and oceanographic data unravel the evolution and environment of the bank, elucidating the factors determining this exceptional state. There are no nutrient-related limitations for coral growth. A switch from a rimmed atoll to a current-exposed system with only mesophotic coral growth is proposed to have followed the South Equatorial Current development during the late Neogene. Combined current activity and sea-level fluctuations are likely controlling factors of modern platform configuration.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
RhodoMalta - Integrated analysis of coralline algae facies of the central Mediterranean since the Oligocene 101003394