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Rib Reef

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Figure 1. Amino acid racemization (AAR) calibration curves for Rib Reef Tellina shells. Ages are calendar years before A.D. 2005 on the y axis and exponentiated amino acid D/L (for A and B) on the x axis. A: 14C age versus aspartic acid D/L2.454. Black squares represent 14C-dated specimens (vertical line is the 2σ age range). Lines are best-fit linear regression and confidence intervals. Gray circles represent AAR ages of shells. B: 14C age versus glutamic acid D/L1.721. Plot format as in A. C: The AAR ages using the glutamic acid versus aspartic acid calibration. All shells are shown with error bars indicating the respective uncertainty on the AAR ages. The bold dashed line is 1:1, and the solid line is least squares regression. Nearly all calibrated age uncertainties overlap the 1:1 line.
Published: 01 September 2007
Figure 1. Amino acid racemization (AAR) calibration curves for Rib Reef Tellina shells. Ages are calendar years before A.D. 2005 on the y axis and exponentiated amino acid D/L (for A and B) on the x axis. A: 14 C age versus aspartic acid D/L 2.454 . Black squares represent 14 C-dated
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 09 August 2023
Geology (2023) 51 (10): 983–987.
... of the reefs that make up the Great Barrier Reef remains uncertain. Moreover, of the numerous and varied threats, their relative role in impacting individual reefs is generally unclear. Here, we adopt a novel approach to reliably reconstruct historical disturbance events at Rib and Davies Reefs, two mid-shelf...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 November 2009
Paleobiology (2009) 35 (4): 565–586.
... carbonate lagoon of Rib Reef, central Great Barrier Reef, Australia. The top 20 cm of sediment contains a distinct, essentially modern assemblage. Shells recovered at depths from 25 to 125 cm are age-homogeneous and significantly older than the surface layer. Taxon age distributions within sedimentary...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 2007
Geology (2007) 35 (9): 811–814.
...Figure 1. Amino acid racemization (AAR) calibration curves for Rib Reef Tellina shells. Ages are calendar years before A.D. 2005 on the y axis and exponentiated amino acid D/L (for A and B) on the x axis. A: 14 C age versus aspartic acid D/L 2.454 . Black squares represent 14 C-dated...
FIGURES
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Figure 1. Map of the central Great Barrier Reef showing the location of Rib Reef. Map redrawn and simplified from the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 2003 zoning plan map MPZ8 - Townsville
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 1. Map of the central Great Barrier Reef showing the location of Rib Reef. Map redrawn and simplified from the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 2003 zoning plan map MPZ8 - Townsville
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(A) Location of study within the mid-shelf region of the central Great Barrier Reef. Rib Reef (B) and Davies Reef (C). Previous photo quadrat locations of Done et al. (2010) were surveyed between 1989 and 1994 (red lines in B). Photo-transect (blue stars) and manta tow (green lines) survey locations were initiated by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) in 1993 and 1986, respectively. Dead coral samples were collected from the AIMS permanent survey transects at sites 1–3 for each reef.
Published: 09 August 2023
Figure 1. (A) Location of study within the mid-shelf region of the central Great Barrier Reef. Rib Reef (B) and Davies Reef (C). Previous photo quadrat locations of Done et al. (2010) were surveyed between 1989 and 1994 (red lines in B). Photo-transect (blue stars) and manta tow (green lines
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230Th age distributions obtained from dead Acropora coral colonies collected from Rib Reef (A) and Davies Reef (B) compared with long-term benthic observations and environmental records for the period 1910–2020. (i) Average hard coral cover (%) surveyed by Done et al. (2010) and AIMS (2015). Observations of hard coral cover made by ^Endean and Stablum (1975, p. 251) in 1969, *Done (1992, p. 656), and #Done et al. (2010, p. 815). (ii) Average Acanthaster sp. (crown-of-thorns starfish, CoTS) counts surveyed by Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS). Observed CoTS outbreaks at Rib Reef from ^Endean and Stablum (1975, p. 251) and *Done et al. (2010, p. 815). Active CoTs outbreaks are defined as >1 CoTS per tow (AIMS, 2015) as indicated by the horizontal dashed line. Solid horizontal black lines indicate the timing of historical scarring events caused by CoTS in massive Porites and Diploastrea spp. (DeVantier and Done, 2007). (iii) Number of cyclones passing within 50 km (orange bars) and 100 km (black bars) of Rib and Davies Reefs (Australian Bureau of Meteorology, 2023; Tables S7 and S8 [see text footnote 1]) and maximum (red line), average (gray line), and minimum (blue line) HadISST sea-surface temperature (SST) anomalies for 1 × 1 degree latitude-longitude grid at 17.5°S, 147.5°E (Rayner et al., 2003). Thermometer and circled question mark indicate known bleaching event and unknown disturbance impacting these reefs (AIMS, 2015). (iv) Corrected 230Th ages obtained from individual dead Acropora corals and probability distribution for the 230Th age data. Black horizontal bars represent individual coral ages (±2σ error). Black filled and unfilled horizontal bars represent individual coral ages, with vertical lines representing the weighted mean age and 95% confidence range (grey shaded box) of grouped samples (filled horizontal bars) dating to the same time period. Weighted mean ages in parentheses are provided if mortality is considered to have occurred over two time periods. Red curve is the probability distribution plot for the 230Th age data with the height and width of the curve reflecting the number of samples dating to the same time period and age precision, respectively (Ludwig, 2012). Black arrows denote time of sampling of dead corals in January 2014. Vertical grey bars highlight windows of lowest periods of coral cover as confirmed by long-term monitoring data (AIMS, 2015).
Published: 09 August 2023
Figure 2. 230 Th age distributions obtained from dead Acropora coral colonies collected from Rib Reef (A) and Davies Reef (B) compared with long-term benthic observations and environmental records for the period 1910–2020. (i) Average hard coral cover (%) surveyed by Done et al. (2010
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Figure 2. Depth of specimen burial in centimeters versus specimen age in years before A.D. 2005 for Rib Reef Tellina shells. Specimens are plotted as circles by layer depth, with bar and whisker plots showing median (bar), 50th percentile (box), and 95th percentile (whisker). Samples above the dashed horizontal lines at 20 cm are younger than samples below the dashed lines. There is no clear age versus depth relation below 20 cm. A: Core 1. B: Core 2, all specimens. C: Core 2, specimens divided into small shells (dark gray) and large shells (light gray). Shells above the dashed horizontal line at 20 cm are not significantly different from each other, but small shells below the dashed line are younger than the large shells below the dashed line.
Published: 01 September 2007
Figure 2. Depth of specimen burial in centimeters versus specimen age in years before A.D. 2005 for Rib Reef Tellina shells. Specimens are plotted as circles by layer depth, with bar and whisker plots showing median (bar), 50th percentile (box), and 95th percentile (whisker). Samples above
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2004
Journal of Paleontology (2004) 78 (5): 866–883.
... consistent. A somewhat greater variation in the sulcus rib number is known in some Late Silurian forms of Stegerhynchus borealis reported by Jones (1981) from Arctic Canada. The sulcus rib number also appears to become unstable in the reef-associated S. vicina from the Chicotte Formation of Anticosti...
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Journal Article
Published: 12 September 2017
Journal of Paleontology (2017) 91 (6): 1123–1147.
... on the basis of their internal structures, such as the crura and their connection to the hinge, the jugum, and spiralia. The internal brachidium and shell of the Aeronian genus Cryptothyrella differ substantially from those of Hindella . Elkanathyris pallula n. gen. n. sp. is recognized as a posteriorly ribbed...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2005
Journal of Paleontology (2005) 79 (1): 48–62.
...JISUO JIN Abstract Gypidula was a common pentameride brachiopod in the Silurian and Devonian periods and its oldest-known form, Gypidula akimiskiformis new species, occurs as a common component of a distinct Gypidula Association of the rich and diverse reef-dwelling brachiopod fauna in the Lower...
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Book Chapter

Author(s)
Alexander Stoyanow
Series: GSA Memoirs
Published: 01 June 1949
DOI: 10.1130/MEM38-p1
... ( T. taffi auctorum in part), and together with the Mural limestone, which with strata containing Orbitolina texana and rudistid reefs rests on the Lowell formation, are equivalent to the Glen Rose of Texas. The latest Lower Cretaceous ammonite zone of Arizona (equivalent of Grayson-Del Rio...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2006
Journal of Paleontology (2006) 80 (5): 981–992.
... form one of the best-preserved Paleozoic reef complexes in the world ( Playford and Lowry, 1966 ; Playford, 1980 , 1981 , 1984 ; Becker et al., 1989 , 1991 ). Extending for about 350 km along the Lennard Shelf along the northern margin of the Canning Basin from the Napier Range in the northwest...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2008
Journal of Micropalaeontology (2008) 27 (1): 13–33.
... of many species of Ambostracon of both subgenera. Hartmann & Kuhl (1978 ) showed this species to be very variable in ornament, ranging from almost smooth to strongly reticulate and ribbed. Ambostracon ( A .) micropapillatum sp. nov. of the present study differs in the position of the lateral...
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Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 15 September 2022
PALAIOS (2022) 37 (9): 539–551.
... in coarser lithologies, reflecting either an ecological preference for sands over muds or a bias against preservation in mudstones. Endoskeletobionts were also more common on ribbed/costate host shells. Biotic interactions are central to both ecology and evolution: they affect the distribution...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2006
Journal of Micropalaeontology (2006) 25 (1): 73–94.
...%) and platycopids/cladocopids (13%). There has been a resurgence of studies of Ostracoda in the SW Pacific area. Among the important contributions of the last decades are Behrens (1991a, b – Great Barrier Reef), Cabioch et al . (1986 – New Caledonia), Dewi (1997 – Java Sea), Howe & McKenzie (1989...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2018
Journal of Paleontology (2018) 92 (3): 412–431.
... are differentiated: growth lines, ridges, and ribs. Ridges are taller than growth lines; contrary to ribs, ridges are never visible on internal molds, while ribs usually form raised zones on the mold. Lateral furrow and pseudoumbilicus, both newly defined terms, are defined below. Subclass Nautiloidea Agassiz...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2009
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2009) 57 (3-4): 217–234.
... within mainly the late Asbian reef facies of the Hopedale Limestones. However, a small quarry exposure [SK 1090 5686] has yielded ammonoids from a brachiopod-rich floatstone/wackestone of Chadian age, associated with a crinoidal packstone containing a late Chadian fauna. Tilsley (1988) and Riley (1991...
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Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 11 February 2016
Paleobiology (2016) 42 (2): 289–304.
... among taxa. Lungs are considered primitive for the Osteichthyes, however the distinctive buccal pump mode of air gulping exhibited by extant lungfishes appears to be a specialization. It is associated with a number of derived skeletal characters (cranial ribs, long parasphenoid stalk, midline gap...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2000
Journal of Paleontology (2000) 74 (6): 1043–1064.
... the Caballero Formation is the Lake Valley Formation, which in the Sacramento Mountains is well known for its Waulsortian-type reefs, some of which attain a thickness of 100 m, and are exposed throughout the northern part of the range ( Lane, 1982 ). Loudon and Bowsher (1941, 1949) subdivided the Lake Valley...
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