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Conway, K.W., Barrie, J.V & Krautter, M. (2004):
Modern siliceous sponge reefs in a turbid, siliciclastic setting:
Fraser River delta, British Columbia, Canada. - Neues Jahrbuch für
Geologie und Paläontologie Monatshefte, 2004/6: 335-350, 5 Abb.; Stuttgart.
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Abstract: Siliceous sponges have formed reefs within
the prodelta of the Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada,
in an area where sedimentation rates adjacent to the reef site are greater
than 2cm per year. These newly discovered reefs differ in important ways from
those described previously from the northern British Columbia continental shelf.
The reefs consist of roughly circular inter-connected mounds up to 14m in height
and 200m in diameter, found in water depths of 150-190m and restricted to the top
and flanks of an isolated promontory in the midst of the rapidly expanding
Holocene prodelta. Two species of hexactinosidan sponge, Aphrocallistes vastus
and Heterochone calyx, build a framework of densly packed sponge skeletons while
several other species of hexactinellida and demosponges are accessory fauna.
Morphologic differences in the framebuilding species are seen as responses to
the extremely different environmental conditions of the sediment starved northern
shelf and the turbid delta habitats.
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