Mud mounds: A polygenetic spectrum of fine-grained carbonate buildups Gerd FlajsManfred VigenerBernd Kaufmann OriginalPaper Pages: 1 - 69
Controls on modern carbonate sedimentation on warm-temperate to arctic coasts, shelves and seamounts in the Northern Hemisphere: Implications for fossil counterparts Rüdiger HenrichAndré FreiwaldDietrich H. H. Kühlmann OriginalPaper Pages: 71 - 108
Reef-bryozoans and bryozoan-microreefs: Control factor evidence from the philippines and other regions Joachim ScholzGero Hillmer OriginalPaper Pages: 109 - 143
Factors controlling holocene reef growth: An interdisciplinary approach Wolf-Christian DulloMarcos GektidisKlaus Vogel OriginalPaper Pages: 145 - 188
Upper cretaceous rudist and stromatoporid associations of Central Oman (Arabian Peninsula) Dietrich Schumann OriginalPaper Pages: 189 - 202
Cenomanian/Turonian sponge microbialite deep-water hardground community (Liencres, Northern Spain) Joachim ReitnerMarkus WilmsenFritz Neuweiler OriginalPaper Pages: 203 - 212
Plaeocene reef sediments from the maiella carbonate platform, Italy Esmail MoussavianAdam Vecsei OriginalPaper Pages: 213 - 221
Lithostratigraphy and facies development of upper cretaceous carbonates in east central Sinai, Egypt Mahmoud KoraAdel Genedi OriginalPaper Pages: 223 - 235
Nature and distribution of porosity and permeability in jurassic carbonate reservoirs of the Arabian Gulf basin Abdulrahman S. AlsharhanKinji Magara OriginalPaper Pages: 237 - 253
Discussion and reply: Microatoll microbialites of Lake Clifton, Western Australia: The morphological analogues ofCryptozöon proliferum Hall, the first formally-named stromatolite Gerald M. FriedmanRobert V. Burne OriginalPaper Pages: 255 - 257