“…Scleractinian corals can live for hundreds of years and continuously record changes in the marine environment in their aragonitic skeletons. Annual density banding in corals allows accurate time control on reconstructions (Knutson et al, 1972), and many studies have utilized corals for paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental reconstruction, measuring stable isotopes (Dunbar et al, 1994;Cobb et al, 2003, Marion et al, 2005 and metals that substitute into the CaCO 3 matrix (Smith et al, 1979;Hanna and Muir, 1990;Bastidas and Garcia, 1999;Fallon et al, 2002;David, 2003;McCulloch et al, 2003;Ramos et al, 2004;Fleitmann et al, 2007;Lewis et al, 2007;Prouty et al, 2008). Although the coral calcification mechanism and therefore the exact pathway of metal substitution in the aragonite matrix are still under debate (Cohen and McConnaughey, 2003), empirical studies have shown that corals appear to faithfully record relative metal concentrations in the surrounding seawater (Runnalls and Coleman, 2003;Correge, 2006).…”