- Sclerochronology
Sclerochronology is the study of physical and chemical variations in the accretionary hard tissues of
organism s, and the temporal context in which they formed. The term comes from the three Greek words "scleros" – hard, "chronos" – time and "logos" – science, and refers to the science of ordering events in time. Sclerochronology focuses primarily upon growth patterns reflecting annual, monthly, fortnightly, tidal, daily, and sub-daily (ultradian)increment s of time. The regular time increments are controlled bybiological clock s which - in turn - are entrained by environmental and astronomical pacemakers.Familiar examples include annual bandings in reef coral
skeleton s or daily growth increments inmollusk shells and fish otoliths. Sclerochronology is analogous todendrochronology , the study of annual rings in trees, and equally seeks to deduce organismallife history traits as well as to reconstruct records of environmental and climatic change through space and time.
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