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Effects of bleaching on organic and mineral phases in biogenic carbonates

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This article is published in Journal of Sedimentary Research.The article was published on 1993-07-01. It has received 114 citations till now.

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Holocene variations in the Asian monsoon inferred from the geochemistry of lake sediments in central Tibet

TL;DR: In this article, a record of monsoon variations for the early and middle Holocene is inferred from the geochemistry of sediment cores from Ahung Co, a lake in central Tibet.
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Mucins and molluscan calcification. Molecular characterization of mucoperlin, a novel mucin-like protein from the nacreous shell layer of the fan mussel Pinna nobilis (Bivalvia, pteriomorphia).

TL;DR: This is the first paper reporting the cloning of a molluscan mucin and the first molecular evidence for the involvement of a mucin in mollusk calcification, and proposes the name mucoperlin.
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The Skeletal Proteome of the Coral Acropora millepora: The Evolution of Calcification by Co-Option and Domain Shuffling

TL;DR: The first survey of skeletal organic matrix proteins in the staghorn coral Acropora millepora suggests that co-option and domain shuffling may be general mechanisms by which the trait of calcification has evolved.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of biominerals in the sinking flux and preservation of amino acids in the Southern Ocean along 170°W

TL;DR: In a study of the transport and transformation of particulate amino acids in the Southern Ocean, Dauwe and Middelburg as mentioned in this paper found that silicate and calcium carbonate biominerals play an important role in the preservation of amino acids throughout the water column and surface sediments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of seawater pCO2 on calcification and Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca ratios in benthic foraminifera calcite: results from culturing experiments with Ammonia tepida

TL;DR: In this paper, the sensitivity of benthic foraminifera to changing carbon dioxide levels and subsequent alteration in seawater carbonate chemistry was assessed by growing specimens of the shallow water species Ammonia tepida at two concentrations of atmospheric CO2 (230 and 1900 ppmv) and two temperatures (10 °C and 15 °C).
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