Authors
Rodrigo L Moura, Gilberto M Amado-Filho, Fernando C Moraes, Poliana S Brasileiro, Paulo S Salomon, Michel M Mahiques, Alex C Bastos, Marcelo G Almeida, Jomar M Silva Jr, Beatriz F Araujo, Frederico P Brito, Thiago P Rangel, Braulio CV Oliveira, Ricardo G Bahia, Rodolfo P Paranhos, Rodolfo JS Dias, Eduardo Siegle, Alberto G Figueiredo Jr, Renato C Pereira, Camille V Leal, Eduardo Hajdu, Nils E Asp, Gustavo B Gregoracci, Sigrid Neumann-Leitão, Patricia L Yager, Ronaldo B Francini-Filho, Adriana Fróes, Mariana Campeão, Bruno S Silva, Ana PB Moreira, Louisi Oliveira, Ana C Soares, Lais Araujo, Nara L Oliveira, João B Teixeira, Rogerio AB Valle, Cristiane C Thompson, Carlos E Rezende, Fabiano L Thompson
Publication date
2016/4/22
Journal
Science advances
Volume
2
Issue
4
Pages
e1501252
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Large rivers create major gaps in reef distribution along tropical shelves. The Amazon River represents 20% of the global riverine discharge to the ocean, generating up to a 1.3 × 106–km2 plume, and extensive muddy bottoms in the equatorial margin of South America. As a result, a wide area of the tropical North Atlantic is heavily affected in terms of salinity, pH, light penetration, and sedimentation. Such unfavorable conditions were thought to imprint a major gap in Western Atlantic reefs. We present an extensive carbonate system off the Amazon mouth, underneath the river plume. Significant carbonate sedimentation occurred during lowstand sea level, and still occurs in the outer shelf, resulting in complex hard-bottom topography. A permanent near-bottom wedge of ocean water, together with the seasonal nature of the plume’s eastward retroflection, conditions the existence of this extensive (~9500 km2) hard …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RL Moura, GM Amado-Filho, FC Moraes, PS Brasileiro… - Science advances, 2016