Influence of benthic sediment transport on cold-water coral bank morphology and growth: the example of the Darwin Mounds, north-east Atlantic

The Darwin Mounds are small (up to 70 m in diameter), discrete cold-water coral banks found at c. 950 m water depth in the northern Rockall Trough, north-east Atlantic. Formerly described in terms of their genesis, the Darwin Mounds are re-evaluated here in terms of mound growth processes based on 1...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sedimentology
Main Authors: Wheeler, Andrew J., Kozachenko, Maxim, Masson, Doug G., Huvenne, Veerle A.I.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
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Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/50409/
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/120121286/PDFSTART
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Summary:The Darwin Mounds are small (up to 70 m in diameter), discrete cold-water coral banks found at c. 950 m water depth in the northern Rockall Trough, north-east Atlantic. Formerly described in terms of their genesis, the Darwin Mounds are re-evaluated here in terms of mound growth processes based on 100 and 410 kHz side-scan sonar data. The side-scan sonar coverage is divided into a series of acoustic facies representing increasing current speed and sediment transport/erosion from south to north: pockmark facies, ‘mounds within depressions’ facies, Darwin Mound facies, stippled seabed facies and sand wave facies. Mound morphometric changes are quantified and show a south-to-north divergence from an inherited morphology, reflecting the outline of coral-colonized fluid escape structures, to developed, downstream elongated, elevated mound forms. It is postulated that increasing current speeds and bedload sand transport favour mound growth and development by a process of enhanced sand sedimentation within mounds due to current deceleration by frictional drag around coral colonies. Comparisons are made with similar growth processes attributed to comparably sized cold-water coral mounds in the Porcupine Seabight, offshore Ireland.