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Coral reefs serve as records for reconstructing climate and storm patterns

10.29.02 | University of Cincinnati

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Meyer's previous research established that coral reefs can be an index of the ocean's health and are greatly impacted by pollution. The report he will deliver at this year's GSA meeting describes how hurricanes affect coral formations and will help scientists compare modern storm effects to those of the past.

Meyer conducted the research with Benjamin Greenstein of Cornell College in Mt. Vernon, Iowa, and recent UC graduate Jill Bries. The trio's work investigated the effect that the frequency of hurricanes had on the geological record contained in coral reefs. In high-frequency hurricane areas like the Bahamas and Florida Keys, coral formations were damaged and broken. Meyer described it "like a forest fire going through." Reefs studied in the southern Caribbean islands of Curacao and Bonaire were well preserved owing to a very low frequency of storms.

The reefs of the Caribbean region were formed during the interglacial stages of the Pleistocene epoch when sea levels were much higher; current sea levels have left these reefs exposed and intact. Both areas of reefs were formed by the same species and fairly close together in terms of geological time.

By comparing the Caribbean reefs with the newer formations in the Bahaman and Floridian areas, Meyer, Greenstein, and Bries were able to establish a model for looking at older fossil reefs.

"As you go farther back in time," said Meyer, "the reef building species are different and you need a present model to start with. Then you can go back to more ancient reefs to get more insight into the climate and storm patterns of older times."

Meyer said that Bries obtained funding for the project from Sigma Xi, the Paleobiological Fund, and UC's graduate division.

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Contact Information

Marianne Kunnen-Jones
University of Cincinnati
marianne.kunnen-jones@uc.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Cincinnati. (2002, October 29). Coral reefs serve as records for reconstructing climate and storm patterns. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1GNDO35L/coral-reefs-serve-as-records-for-reconstructing-climate-and-storm-patterns.html
MLA:
"Coral reefs serve as records for reconstructing climate and storm patterns." Brightsurf News, Oct. 29 2002, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1GNDO35L/coral-reefs-serve-as-records-for-reconstructing-climate-and-storm-patterns.html.