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Carbonate sediments are of increasing relevance for archives of
past environmental conditions and for economical reasons in areas
of geothermal energy and hydrocarbon reservoirs. Complex
interaction of physical and chemical parameters with biological
parameters determines the architecture and composition of carbonate
sedimentary bodies. This book closes some of the still existing
gaps in our understanding of the influence and interplay of
physical, chemical, and biological parameters with carbonate
sedimentation. An understanding of this interaction is not only
required for reliable prediction of reservoir quality but also for
a robust interpretation of environmental conditions in the past and
the present. It is written by geologists for geologists in order to
provide an easily accessible overview of the large amount of
relevant information provided by the neighbouring sciences. The
approach of the book is to document the modern depositional
environments of three classical areas of carbonate deposition, each
characteristic for a specific sedimentological setting (isolated
platform, attached shelf, ramp) in order to assess both the range
of physical, biological and chemical parameters and their
sedimentary response. This book presents a comprehensive
compilation based on data from published work and unpublished
theses, and the integration of these data in order to extract
previously undiscovered relationships between the discussed
parameters and carbonate deposition.
Population Dynamics of the Reef Crisis, Volume 87 in the Advances
in Marine Biology series, updates on many topics that will appeal
to postgraduates and researchers in marine biology, fisheries
science, ecology, zoology and biological oceanography. Chapters in
this new release cover SCTL disease and coral population dynamics
in S-Florida, Spatial dynamics of juvenile corals in the
Persian/Arabian Gulf, Surprising stability in sea urchin
populations following shifts to algal dominance on heavily bleached
reefs, Biophysical model of population connectivity in the Persian
Gulf, Population dynamics of 20-year decline in clownfish anemones
on coral reefs at Eilat, northern Red Sea, and much more.
Carbonate sediments are of increasing relevance for archives of
past environmental conditions and for economical reasons in areas
of geothermal energy and hydrocarbon reservoirs. Complex
interaction of physical and chemical parameters with biological
parameters determines the architecture and composition of carbonate
sedimentary bodies. This book closes some of the still existing
gaps in our understanding of the influence and interplay of
physical, chemical, and biological parameters with carbonate
sedimentation. An understanding of this interaction is not only
required for reliable prediction of reservoir quality but also for
a robust interpretation of environmental conditions in the past and
the present. It is written by geologists for geologists in order to
provide an easily accessible overview of the large amount of
relevant information provided by the neighbouring sciences. The
approach of the book is to document the modern depositional
environments of three classical areas of carbonate deposition, each
characteristic for a specific sedimentological setting (isolated
platform, attached shelf, ramp) in order to assess both the range
of physical, biological and chemical parameters and their
sedimentary response. This book presents a comprehensive
compilation based on data from published work and unpublished
theses, and the integration of these data in order to extract
previously undiscovered relationships between the discussed
parameters and carbonate deposition.
Coral Reefs of the Gulf: Adaptation to Climatic Extremes is a
complete review and reference for scientists, engineers and
students concerned with the geology, biology or engineering aspects
of coral reefs in the Middle East. It provides for the first time a
complete review of both the geology and biology of all extant coral
areas in the Gulf, the water body between Iran and the Arabian
Peninsula. In summer, this area is the hottest sea with abundant
coral growth on earth and already today exhibits a temperature that
is predicted to occur across the topical ocean in 2100. Thus, by
studying the Gulf today, much can be learned about tomorrow's world
and the capability of coral reefs to adapt to climatic extremes.
This volume provides the most authoritative and up-to-date review
of the coral reefs in the Gulf. It can be used as a volume of
general reference or as a textbook treating recent coral reefs.
Written by local and international experts, the text is richly
illustrated and will remain a standard reference for the region for
decades to come. Contributions stretch from climatology through
geology, biology, ecological modelling and fisheries science to
practical conservation aspects. The book is useful for the
technical expert and casual reader alike.
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