Journal article

Holocene reef growth in Torres Strait

CD Woodroffe, DM Kennedy, D Hopley, CE Rasmussen, SG Smithers

Marine Geology | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 2000

Abstract

The platform and fringing reefs of Torres Strait are morphologically similar to reefs of the northern Great Barrier Reef to the south, except that several are elongated in the direction of the strong tidal currents between the Coral Sea and the Gulf of Carpentaria. Surface and subsurface investigations and radiocarbon dating on Yam, Warraber and Hammond Islands reveal that the initiation and mode of Holocene reef growth reflect antecedent topography and sea-level history. On the granitic Yam Island, fringing reefs have established in some places over a Pleistocene limestone at about 6 m depth around 7000 years BP. Emergent Holocene microatolls of Porites sp. indicate that the reefs have prog..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers