The giant clam, Tridacna gigas, is an important faunal component of Indo-Pacific reef ecosystems, for which its shell is often used as an environmental archive for modern and past climates. This thesis is a study of the shell microstructure of modern specimens from Palm Island, Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia and Huon Peninsula, Papua-New Guinea (PNG), using a combination of petrography, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and Raman spectroscopy, as well as a microstructural comparison of fossil T. gigas through 200 ka from PNG. Daily growth increments are recognizable in all specimens through ontogeny within the internal layer. For modern T. gigas from PNG, increments are composed of pairs of org...
Bivalve shells contain growth lines which are formed as a result of periodic environmental or physio...
International audienceThe use of the sclerochronology and geochemistry of a New Caledonian (South We...
We compare monthly resolved oxygen isotope records derived from a giant bivalve shell, Tridacna giga...
This article provides novel data on the microstructure and crystallographic texture of modern giant ...
International audienceTridacnidae shells, a valuable archive of past environments, are common in the...
The health of reef-building corals has declined due to climate change and pollution. However, less i...
Tridacnidae shells, a valuable archive of past environments, are common in the Balobok Rockshelter a...
Sclerochronology is a powerful tool for high resolution paleoclimate and paleoenvironment reconstruc...
Tridacna spp. usually have annual and even daily growth bands, and thus provide great potential to b...
This study investigates the environmental and biological controls on trace element partitioning and ...
Bivalve shells contain growth lines which are formed as a result of periodic environmental or physio...
International audienceThe use of the sclerochronology and geochemistry of a New Caledonian (South We...
We compare monthly resolved oxygen isotope records derived from a giant bivalve shell, Tridacna giga...
This article provides novel data on the microstructure and crystallographic texture of modern giant ...
International audienceTridacnidae shells, a valuable archive of past environments, are common in the...
The health of reef-building corals has declined due to climate change and pollution. However, less i...
Tridacnidae shells, a valuable archive of past environments, are common in the Balobok Rockshelter a...
Sclerochronology is a powerful tool for high resolution paleoclimate and paleoenvironment reconstruc...
Tridacna spp. usually have annual and even daily growth bands, and thus provide great potential to b...
This study investigates the environmental and biological controls on trace element partitioning and ...
Bivalve shells contain growth lines which are formed as a result of periodic environmental or physio...
International audienceThe use of the sclerochronology and geochemistry of a New Caledonian (South We...
We compare monthly resolved oxygen isotope records derived from a giant bivalve shell, Tridacna giga...