The word atoll comes from the Divehi (Indo-Aryan language of the Maldive Islands) word atolu. Its first recorded use in English was in 1625.
Charles Darwin published an explanation for the creation of coral atolls in the South Pacific (Darwin, 1842) based upon observations made during a five-year voyage aboard the HMS Beagle (1831-1836). His explanation, which is accepted as basically correct, involved considering that several tropical island types from high volcanic island, through barrier reef island, to atoll represented a sequence of gradual subsidence of an original oceanic volcano. He reasoned that a fringing coral reef surrounding a volcanic island in the tropical sea will grow upwards as the island subsides (sinks), eventually becoming a barrier reef island (as typified by an island such as Bora Bora and others in the Society Islands). The fringing reef becomes a barrier reef for the reason that the outer part of the reef maintains itself near sea level through biotic growth, while the inner part of the reef falls behind, becoming a lagoon where conditions are less favorable for the calcareous algae responsible for most reef growth. In time, subsidence carries the old volcano below the ocean surface, but the barrier reef remains. At this point, the island is an atoll. Because atolls are the product of the growth of tropical marine organisms, these islands are only found in the tropical ocean. Volcanic islands located beyond the warm water temperature requirements of reef bulding (hermatypic) organisms become seamounts as they subside and are eroded away.
R. A. Daly offered a somewhat different explanation: islands worn away by erosion (ocean waves and streams) during the last glacial stand of the sea of some 300 feet below present sea level, developed as coral islands (atolls) (or barrier reefs on a platform surrounding a volcanic island not completely worn away) as sea level gradually rose from melting of the glaciers. Discovery of the great depth of the volcanic remnant beneath many atolls, favored the Darwin explanation, although there can be little doubt that fluctuating sea level has had considerable influence on atoll and other reefs.
The distribution of atolls around the globe is instructive: they are mostly limited to the oceanic basins of the Pacific and Indian oceans. A very few atolls are found in the Atlantic.
Mode of formation
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