“…Much effort has been put into the production of systematic inventories of several groups of invertebrates (molluscs, brachiopods, balanids, ostracods, echinoderms and bryozoans; Janssen et al ., 2008; Kroh et al ., 2008; Winkelmann et al ., 2010; Madeira et al ., 2011; Meireles et al ., 2012; Ávila et al ., 2016b, 2018b), vertebrate fossil remains (sharks, cetaceans, and bony fishes; Ávila et al ., 2012, 2015c, 2020a), ichnofossils (Santos et al ., 2015; Uchman et al ., 2016, 2017, 2018) and algae (Rebelo et al ., 2014, 2016a,b). The work on Santa Maria Island also resulted in publications regarding the study of both the geological evolutionary history of the island (Ramalho et al ., 2017) and of the physical and biological processes impacting the insular shelf (Ramalho et al ., 2013; Rovere et al ., 2016; Johnson et al ., 2017; Quartau et al ., 2018; Ricchi et al ., 2018; Uchman et al ., 2020). A recent and detailed geomorphological analysis of its insular shelf, based on a very high‐resolution bathymetrical survey, provided key information about shelf sediment transport processes (Ricchi et al ., 2020) and on the age of the latest eruptions taking place at Santa Maria Island edifice (Ramalho et al ., 2020).…”