MODERN NON-TROPICAL CARBONATES CALIBRATED AGAINST NUTRIENTS AND TEMPERATURE
(1) subtropical coral dominated shallow carbonate factories (0-20 m water depth) with average SSTs of 25ºC (min. 18ºC, max. 31ºC) and chlorophyll a levels, which are a proxy for nutrients, of 0.3 mg Cla/m-3 (max. 0.48, min. 0.1).
(2) warm-temperate red algal dominated subtidal to inner shelf carbonate production (5-40m) in the central GOC exhibiting average temperatures of 23ºC (min. 18ºC, max. 30ºC) and chlorophyll a levels of 0.6 Cla/m-3 (max. 5.62, min. 0).
(3) cool-temperate type molluskan-bryozoan rich outer shelf factories in the northern GOC (20- >120m) with SSTs of only 20ºC (min. 13ºC, max 29ºC) and average contents of 2.2 mg Cla/m-3 (max. 8.38, min. 0).
With an average of 35, salinity fluctuates little throughout the year and shows a small gradient between southern and northern sites, and therefore does not excert a large controlling factor on carbonate producers in the GOC. By calibrating sedimentological with in situ measured oceanographic information in different environments within the same oceanic setting we provide a modern example for interpretation of similar non-tropical fossil carbonate settings, and we demonstrate the importance of recognizing not only the average, but also short term extreme values of temperature and often neglected trophic resources as an important factor determining the composition of carbonates.