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Conway, K.W., Barrie, J.V., & Krautter, M. (2005):
Geomorphology of unique reefs on the western Canadian shelf: sponge reefs
mapped by multibeam bathymetry.
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Abstract: Multibeam imagery of siliceous sponge reefs (Hexactinellida,
Hexactinosida) reveals the setting, form, and organization of five reef
complexes on the western Canadian continental shelf. The reefs are built by
framework skeleton sponges which trap clay-rich sediments resulting in a
distinctive pattern of low intensity backscatter from the reefs that colonize more
reflective glacial sediments of higher backscatter intensity. Bathymetry and
backscatter maps show the distribution and form of reefs in two large complexes
in the Queen Charlotte Basin (QCB) covering hundreds of km2, and three
smaller reef complexes in the Georgia Basin (GB). Ridges up to 7 km long and
21 m in height, together with diversely shaped, coalescing bioherms and
biostromes form the principal reef shape in the QCB whereas chains of
wave-form, streamlined mounds up to 14 m in height have developed in the GB.
Reef initiation is dependent on the distribution of high backscatter-intensity
relict glacial surfaces, and the variation in reef complex morphology is probably
the result of tidally driven, near seabed currents.
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