The Darwin Mounds are small (up to 70 m in diameter), discrete cold-water coral banks found at c. 950 m water depth in the northern Rockall Trough, north-east Atlantic. Formerly described in terms of their genesis, the Darwin Mounds are re-evaluated here in terms of mound growth processes based on 100 and 410 kHz side-scan sonar data. The side-scan sonar coverage is divided into a series of acoustic facies representing increasing current speed and sediment transport/erosion from south to north: pockmark facies, ‘mounds within depressions’ facies, Darwin Mound facies, stippled seabed facies and sand wave facies. Mound morphometric changes are quantified and show a south-to-north divergence from an inherited morphology, reflecting the outline...
Carbonate mounds, identified as deep-water coral banks, have been reported recently from three provi...
Large cold-water coral carbonate mounds are well-known from several locations along the north-east A...
Cold-water corals are distributed all over the world's oceans where they form a high variety of ecos...
International audienceCold-water coral mounds, formed through a feed-back process of cold-water cora...
Mounds associated with the cold water coral Lophelia pertusa are widespread in the North Atlantic, a...
Cold-water coral mounds are common features in certain regions along the Atlantic margin. They occur...
Cold-water coral mounds, formed through a feed-back process of cold-water coral growth and sediment ...
Currents play a vital role in sustaining and developing deep water benthic habitats by mobilising fo...
IODP Expedition 307, targeting the 160 m high Challenger Mound and its surroundings in the Porcupine...
Various investigations carried out within the course of the EC FP5 GEOMOUND and ECOMOUND projects hi...
Carbonate mounds (up to 200 m high) formed from the accumulated remains of cold-water corals (princi...
Large cold-water coral carbonate mounds are well-known from several locations along the north-east A...
Cold-water coral mounds on both margins of the Rockall Trough (NE Atlantic Ocean) have a strongly di...
Corals have long been associated with warm and shallow water in tropical settings. Nevertheless an i...
Carbonate mounds, identified as deep-water coral banks, have been reported recently from three provi...
Large cold-water coral carbonate mounds are well-known from several locations along the north-east A...
Cold-water corals are distributed all over the world's oceans where they form a high variety of ecos...
International audienceCold-water coral mounds, formed through a feed-back process of cold-water cora...
Mounds associated with the cold water coral Lophelia pertusa are widespread in the North Atlantic, a...
Cold-water coral mounds are common features in certain regions along the Atlantic margin. They occur...
Cold-water coral mounds, formed through a feed-back process of cold-water coral growth and sediment ...
Currents play a vital role in sustaining and developing deep water benthic habitats by mobilising fo...
IODP Expedition 307, targeting the 160 m high Challenger Mound and its surroundings in the Porcupine...
Various investigations carried out within the course of the EC FP5 GEOMOUND and ECOMOUND projects hi...
Carbonate mounds (up to 200 m high) formed from the accumulated remains of cold-water corals (princi...
Large cold-water coral carbonate mounds are well-known from several locations along the north-east A...
Cold-water coral mounds on both margins of the Rockall Trough (NE Atlantic Ocean) have a strongly di...
Corals have long been associated with warm and shallow water in tropical settings. Nevertheless an i...
Carbonate mounds, identified as deep-water coral banks, have been reported recently from three provi...
Large cold-water coral carbonate mounds are well-known from several locations along the north-east A...
Cold-water corals are distributed all over the world's oceans where they form a high variety of ecos...