1999). The thickness of the carbonate cap in the Cayman Islands is unknown but exceeds 400 m (Emery and Milliman 1980). Like the islands of the Tonga Ridge, these are believed to be on different fault blocks moving independently (Horsfield 1975; Jones and Hunter 1990). Barbados is another carbonate-capped high island, formed on the Lesser Antilles
accretionary prism at the leading (eastern) edge of the Caribbean plate (Bouysse et al. 1990). Other high islands with wide barrier reefs, including Rodrigues (Mauritius) and Bermuda, have cemented calcareous CA3 nmr wind-blown sand deposits that form high cliffs on exposed coasts. These are not easily categorized, having elements of at least three island types. Contrasting examples of raised atolls include Aldabra in the CX5461 Seychelles (~8 m elevation, retaining a shallow central lagoon) and the isolated island of Niue in the South Pacific (up to 60 m elevation with a dry lagoon) (Fig. 6). Raised atolls such as Niue have extensive cave development (Fig. 7a). They are typically surrounded by terraces and cliffs, representing various phases of emergence, with a very narrow fringing reef on a wave-cut platform (Fig. 7b). With deep water immediately offshore, extreme waves overtopping the cliffs in major tropical cyclones are a
significant hazard (Solomon and Forbes 1999). Fig. 6 Topography and bathymetry of Niue (Forbes 1996). www.selleckchem.com/products/GSK872-GSK2399872A.html Reproduced with permission from the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, New Caledonia Fig. 7 a Section through raised reef rim and western coast of Niue (modified from Forbes 1996, after Jacobson and Hill 1980). b Cliff reentrant with thin pocket beach fronted by narrow reef
at Hio on northwest coast of Niue (photo DLF 1995). Note prominent fracture in cliff extending partway across basal platform; cliff is 18 m high at this location (Forbes 1996). Permissions: a ©Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) 2013; this product is released under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia Licence. a, b Reproduced with permission from the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, New Caledonia Continental islands A number of the world’s tropical small to Neratinib medium-sized islands are of continental origin (Fig. 2), including Trinidad (detached from South America) and New Caledonia (detached from Australia) (NC in Fig. 1). In the western Indian Ocean, the northern islands of the Seychelles archipelago (e.g., Mahé, Fig. 1) are composed predominantly of Precambrian granitic rocks (Fig. 8a)—the subaerial parts of a micro-continent rifted from Madagascar (Collier et al. 2004). In contrast to the carbonate islands of the southwestern Seychelles, which rise from abyssal depths, the 40 granitic islands are surrounded by a shallow continental shelf covering an area about 300 × 150 km, where water depths are <200 m (Jackson et al. 2005).