Abstract
A new method is proposed for the measurement of coral skeletal density by x-radiography. X-radiographs were made of sections cut from skeletons of massive corals of the genus Porites. Included on the x-ray film with each specimen were an aluminium step-wedge, a set of aragonite standards and several aluminium bars, all of measured thickness and density. The images on the developed x-ray film were scanned with a microdensitometer. Semilogarithmic plots of microdensitometer output voltage vs. thickness of the aluminium and aragonite standards provided characteristic curves, with initial linear slopes which were defined as relative linear absorption coefficients. These coefficients varied with the x-ray exposure and microdensitometer measurement conditions; however, they were consistent within one set of conditions. The relative linear absorption coefficients and densities of the standards, together with data for thickness of standard vs. film exposure, can be used to determine the density of coral specimens at points along microdensitometer traverses of their x-ray images. The bars of aluminium can be used to correct for the non-uniform irradiation of the x-ray film which is characteristic of x-ray machines.
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Contribution No. 299 from the Australian Institute of Marine Science
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Chalker, B., Barnes, D. & Isdale, P. Calibration of x-ray densitometry for the measurement of coral skeletal density. Coral Reefs 4, 95–100 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00300867
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00300867