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Krautter, M., Conway, K.W., & Barrie, J.V. (2006):
Recent hexactinosidan sponge reefs (silicate mounds) off British Columbia, Canada: frame-building
processes.
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Abstract: Hexactinosidan sponges are important reef-building organisms in Earth history
as they are able to create a three-dimensional reef framework and thereby form topographic relief comparable to that
produced by scleractinian corals. Study of modern hexactinosidan sponge skeletons from water depths of 165-240 m on
the continental shelf off British Columbia, Canada, demonstrate the hitherto undescribed frame-building process that
leads to the formation of large so far unique, siliceous sponge reefs in this area. The fundamentals of the
frame-building process are based on the production of siliceous envelopes around spicules of dead hexactinosidan
sponges. In addition to the development of a three-dimensional reef framework, mound growth is supported by the
current baffling effect of the sponges. Fine-grained siliciclastic suspended sediment is trapped and deposited
within the gaps in the sponge skeletons and in voids in the reef surface preventing the framework from collapsing
as the reef grows.
Analogous, but tropical examples from the Lower Jurassic of Portugal show that the frame-building potential of
hexactinosidan and other siliceous sponges has existed, substantially unchanged, for more than 180 million years.
In contrast to well-known fossil mud mounds of various geologic ages, in which the in situ precipitation of
automicrite via microbial processes plays a major role, the matrix of the hexactinosidan sponge mounds of British
Columbia consists exclusively of baffled fine-grained siliciclastics; automicrite is absent. Existing mud mound
classification schemes do not encompass these depositional characteristics, therefore this new type of mound is
consequently here classified as a silicate mound.
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