Inter-reefal seabed sediments and geomorphology of the Great Barrier Reef, a spatial analysis

Created 24/06/2017

Updated 24/06/2017

Inter-reefal (i.e. non-reefal) seabed environments have been much less studied than the coral reefs, however they comprise 95% of the total Great Barrier Reef (GBR) Marine Park area. Regional scale spatial analysis of the sediments and geomorphology in these areas allows for a systematic characterisation of the seabed, where comprehensive biological datasets are lacking. We offer an up-to-date synthesis of inter-reefal environments in the GBR, to better understand the nature and distribution of seabed habitats at a regional scale and within the current planning zone scheme, in support of Marine Park management. New quantitative information about surface sediments and geomorphic features, together comprise a new physical dataset of the GBR seabed. This regional dataset contains over 3,000 sediment samples available in Geoscience Australia's (GA) national marine samples database, MARS (www.ga.gov.au/oracle/mars), substantially improving the coverage of surface sediment data from inter-reefal areas, and; GA's current Geomorphic Features dataset (Harris et al., 2005) of the seabed morphology. This marks the first regional synthesis of the surface sedimentology and geomorphology of the GBR since the pioneering work of Belperio (1983a, 1983b) and Maxwell (1968; 1969a; 1969b; 1973). We present a new quantitative sediment dataset that shows regional trends in surface sediments; refining the existing facies model for the mixed carbonate-siliciclastic GBR margin. Our findings also reveal local scale facies characteristics, within the broader regional trends. Until now these distribution patterns haven't been identified on the GBR shelf and are considered to be an important characteristic of the region. In addition, we have revealed other sedimentary characteristics of the region; - Low gravel concentrations cover extensive parts of the shelf. Patches of high gravel concentration occur locally on parts of the inner and outer shelves, reflecting the input of gravel from reef talus aprons. These areas may also be associated with strong tidal currents. - Sand is the dominant grain size fraction, and highest concentrations occur on the middle and outer shelves. Although continuous regions of high sand concentration occur in the far north (e.g. Cape York) and south (e.g. south of Broad Sound) of the Marine Park, the overall distribution of sand is variable as changes in concentration produce local, small-dimension patches at a scale of 10's of metres. - The patchy distribution of sand may reflect a mixture of; 1) widespread supply of modern skeletal carbonate grains, such as foraminifera, molluscs and Halimeda, and/or restricted supply of relict sand; and, 2) the effects of hydrodynamic irregularities in inter-reef channels. - High mud concentrations predominantly occur along the inner shelf and slope. Mud forms local patches on the inner shelf associated with fluvial point sources, which are spatially discontinuous, producing a regionally variable terrigenous sediment wedge of coalescing mud (and sand) patches. - Surface sediments are carbonate-dominated across the shelf and broadly display a regional north-south, shelf-parallel zonation pattern. Low carbonate concentrations of 80% on the outer shelf. Within the regional zonation pattern, carbonate patches locally produce a variable distribution in sediment composition. - Uniformly high concentrations of bulk carbonate and carbonate mud on the outer shelf, reflect the constant supply of skeletal carbonate grains from inter-reefal environments, in areas of high reef density and the negligible influence of fluvial sediments on the outer shelf. Regional variations in seabed sediments and geomorphology across the region are also evident in the physical character of the planning zones.

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Title Inter-reefal seabed sediments and geomorphology of the Great Barrier Reef, a spatial analysis
Language English
Licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/24b0f97e-1f2b-4cef-8b4f-9db92c6a38b1
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
sales@ga.gov.au
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[142.0, -30.0], [154.0, -30.0], [154.0, -10.0], [142.0, -10.0], [142.0, -30.0]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

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This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "Inter-reefal seabed sediments and geomorphology of the Great Barrier Reef, a spatial analysis". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/inter-reefal-seabed-sediments-and-geomorphology-of-the-great-barrier-reef-a-spatial-analysis

No duplicate datasets found.