Abstract

Fringing coral reefs at Discovery Bay, Jamaica, exhibit a pronounced depth-related gradient in water turbulence and associated physicochemical taphonomic factors (abrasion, dissolution), and thus provide ideal settings for investigating the influence of taphonomic processes on the formation of fossil assemblages. Foraminifera are prominent constituents of bioclastic sediments at Discovery Bay, and exhibit a high diversity of test sizes, shapes, wall compositions, architectures, and microstructures which may potentially affect their post-mortem behavior. We have developed a taphofacies model for Jamaican north coast fringing reefs and associated environments that has allowed us to generate hypotheses about the formation of foraminiferal sediment assemblages

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