Sediment mixing and stratigraphic disorder revealed by the age-structure of Tellina shells in Great Barrier Reef sediment
Sediment mixing and stratigraphic disorder revealed by the age-structure of Tellina shells in Great Barrier Reef sediment
Geology (Boulder) (September 2007) 35 (9): 811-814
- absolute age
- amino acids
- bioclastic sedimentation
- biogenic structures
- bioturbation
- C-14
- calibration
- carbon
- carbonate sediments
- Cenozoic
- Coral Sea
- cores
- dates
- depositional environment
- Great Barrier Reef
- histograms
- Holocene
- Invertebrata
- isotopes
- lagoonal sedimentation
- marine sediments
- Mollusca
- organic acids
- organic compounds
- Pacific Ocean
- Quaternary
- racemization
- radioactive isotopes
- reef environment
- relative age
- sedimentary structures
- sedimentation
- sediments
- shells
- size distribution
- South Pacific
- Southwest Pacific
- statistical analysis
- taphonomy
- thanatocenoses
- upper Holocene
- West Pacific
- Tellina
- Rib Reef
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 250 individually dated Tellina shells from two sediment cores are used to quantify molluscan time averaging with increasing burial depth in the shallow-water carbonate lagoon of Rib Reef, central Great Barrier Reef, Australia. The top 20 cm of sediment contain a distinct, essentially modern assemblage with a median age of only 5 yr. Sediment between 20 and 125 cm are age-homogeneous and significantly older than the surface sediment (median age 189 yr). Shell age distributions within layers indicate that the top 125 cm of lagoonal sediment is thoroughly mixed on a subcentennial scale. Shell size is an important correlate of shell half-life and an important determinant of the inferred age of sedimentary layers. These results illustrate the importance of bioturbation in these environments, indicate that age estimates in this depositional setting are sensitive to specimen choice, and document a size-dependent bias in death assemblage formation.