“…These findings have important implications for analysing carbonate platforms in the fossil record, especially for sequence stratigraphy and cyclostratigraphy where sea-level sequences are supposed to be characterized by filled accommodation space, i.e., where cycle thickness is supposed to approximately equal sea-level variation. In addition to sedimentological projects, detailed foraminiferal studies with atoll lagoon cores were made in the Marshall Islands (Yamano, Kayanne, Matsuda, & Tsuji, 2002), offshore Belize (Schultz, Gischler, & Oschmann, 2010), and in the Maldives (Storz, Gischler, Parker, & Klostermann, 2014). Coarse-grained layers within fine background sediments of atoll and oceanic barrier reef lagoons were used to identify echinoid die-off events in Belize (Gischler, 2010), tsunami sedimentation in the Maldives (Klostermann, Gischler, Storz, & Hudson, 2014) and tempestite deposition in French Polynesia (Toomey, Donnelly, & Woodruff, 2013).…”