Journal article

Episodes of reef growth at Lord Howe Island, the southernmost reef in the southwest Pacific

CD Woodroffe, ME Dickson, BP Brooke, DM Kennedy

Global and Planetary Change | ELSEVIER | Published : 2005

Abstract

Lord Howe Island lies at the present latitudinal limit to reef growth in the Pacific and preserves evidence of episodes of reef development over the Late Quaternary. A modern fringing reef flanks the western shore of Lord Howe Island, enclosing a Holocene lagoon, and Late Quaternary eolianites veneer the island. Coral-bearing beach and shallow-water calcarenites record a sea level around 2-3 m above present during the Last Interglacial. No reefs or subaerial carbonate deposits occur on, or around, Balls Pyramid, 25 km to the south. The results of chronostratigraphic studies of the modern Lord Howe Island reef and lagoon indicate prolific coral production during the mid-Holocene, but less ext..

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University of Melbourne Researchers