Browsing by Author "Seard, C"
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- ItemIODP Expedition 325 to the Great Barrier Reef: unlocking the history of reef growth and demise since the Last Glacial Maximum(Australian Geosciences Council, 2012-08-05) Webster, JM; Braga, JC; Humblet, M; Potts, DC; Iryu, Y; Hinestrosa, G; Bourillot, R; Seard, C; Camoin, G; Yokayama, Y; Thomas, AL; Thompson, B; Esat, TM; Fallon, SJ; Dutton, APredicting how the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) will respond to future global climate changes and over what time frame is crucial. Fossil reefs record critical data on geomorphic and ecological consequences of both long-term and abrupt centennial-millennial scale environmental changes. The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Exp. 325 investigated a succession of submerged fossil reefs on the shelf edge of the GBR to establish the course of sea-level change, define sea-surface temperature variations but also analyse the impact of these environmental changes on reef growth since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Thirty-four boreholes were cored from 17 sites along four transects at three locations (Hydrographers Passage, Noggin Pass and Ribbon Reef) in water depths between 42 to 167 m. These cores record responses of the GBR to past environmental stresses similar to current scenarios of future climate change (i.e. changing sea-levels, SST’s, water quality). Initial lithologic, biologic and chronologic data document an active coral reef system that grew, drowned and backstepped up-slope as sea level rose since the LGM. We present an overview of the main Exp. 325 results, including a synthesis of the dating, paleoclimate and reef response team’s findings, in the context of the available site survey data (bathymetry, seismic, seabed imagery). Finally, we discuss the broader implications of these data for understanding how the geometry, composition and development of the GBR responded to repeated and major environmental disturbances since the LGM.