LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lower Palaeozoic history of UK 1. Continental motions 2. Cambrian events 3. Ordovician events - The Grampian Orogeny 4. Ordovician and Silurian - The history.
Advertisements

Early Paleozoic Events
Objectives Describe the elevation distribution of Earth’s surface.
Crust-Mantle Relationships & Orogeny
Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian Geology Eastern United States.
Where in Georgia do you find Sediments & Sedimentary Rocks? Coastal Plain Province Valley & Ridge Province* In all provinces, young sediments are associated.
Latest Precambrian / Early Paleozoic Supercontinent Rodinia, centered about the south pole, breaks apart. North America (Laurentia), Baltica, and Siberia.
Relative Dating and Sequencing Relative vs. Absolute Time Laws Unconformities Correlating Geologic Cross Sections.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Late Ordovician Period Limestone, Limestone, and more Limestone and The Emergence of the Appalachians.
The Grand Canyon Tells the Story of North America Knowing how and where rocks are formed allows us to read the story written in the rocks. A mile thickness.
Early Paleozoic Events
3/19/12 - Bellringer What associations are there when…
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 HISTORICAL GEOLOGY EARLY CENOZOIC I. EARLY CENOZOIC: ( MYBP): Introduction: Much of the landscape as it appears.
EARLY PALEOZOIC EVENTS CAMBRIAN PALEOGEOGRAPHY Development of a shallow epeiric or epicontinental sea Continent situated on the equator, so waters most.
Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea
Earth: Geologic Principles and History FIRST EDITIONCHERNICOFF/FOX/TANNER.
Rodinia, Rifting, Iapetus and the Great American Bank
Paleozoic Geology Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea.
Early Paleozoic Earth History Chapter 10 William Smith, –a canal builder, published the first geologic map –on August 1, 1815 The First Geologic Map.
Ordovician EARLY PALEOZOIC LIFE. Silurian EARLY PALEOZOIC LIFE.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
Early Paleozoic. Periods of the Early Paleozoic ► Cambrian: mya ► Ordovician: mya ► Silurian: mya.
mountains, mountain building, & growth of continents
LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Part 5a: Stratigraphy and Tectonics of the Carboniferous and the Permian Periods in North America.
Historical and Stratigraphic Analysis of the Grand Canyon By: Jake Halfhill.
Chapter 10 Early Paleozoic Earth History. New York State Most surface rocks are from the Paleozoic.
Late Paleozoic Geology. Includes Devonian, Carboniferous, & PermianIncludes Devonian, Carboniferous, & Permian.
EVOLUTION/HISTORY OF THE CONTINENTS Chapter 10. Spreading center (divergent boundary) Subduction margin (convergent boundary) Transform fault Island arc.
Paleozoic Era.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Carboniferous and the Permian Periods in North America.
Early Paleozoic Earth History
California Geologic History Part I: Pre-San Andreas Fault System.
Geology of Virginia Why? Pulls together what they already know: Rocks Plate Tectonics Wilson Cycles Geologic Structures Stratigraphic Principles/Sequence.
Part 3 The Paleozoic era.
Harry Williams, Geomorphology1 TECTONIC REGIONS OF NORTH AMERICA The distribution of tectonic activity around continents (including North America) usually.
Historical Geology Lecture 16 The Middle Paleozoic Era.
Early Paleozoic Geology. Basic Rules of Geology Transgression – rise in sea level Regression – lower in sea level Convergence leads to orogeny Orogeny.
Part 1: The Vendian, Cambrian, and Early Ordovician Periods
Historical Geology Lecture 14 Events of the Early Paleozoic Era.
LECTURE 12. LATE MESOZOIC GEOLOGY.
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 HISTORICAL GEOLOGY LECTURE 11. EARLY MESOZOIC GEOLOGY. TRIASSIC-JURASSIC ( MYBP) Introduction: The Mesozoic.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Silurian and Devonian Periods – Part II Stratigraphy and Tectonics.
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 HISTORICAL GEOLOGY LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. The Late Paleozoic (Devonian-Mississippian- Pennsylvanian-Permian)
© 2013 JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1 THE EARTH THROUGH TIME TENTH EDITION H A R O L D L. L E V I N.
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 PENNSYLVANIAN - PERMIAN. 1. Paleogeography The Pennsylvanian opened with the Kaskaskia Regression, which left a widespread.
Early Paleozoic Events
 Rodinia broke up   Life became more complex and thrived.
North American Geological History. So what did we figure out about the East Coast so far? Proterozoic: suture zone, rifting Cambrian: passive margin Ordovician:
Late Paleozoic Earth History
Part 4b: Stratigraphy and Tectonics of Silurian and Devonian Periods
PALEOZOIC Ch 10 & 11.
Geologic Sequencing: The order of geologic events
Earth Science Topic #13 Review Game
Geologic Evolution of Eastern North America
The Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic Eras
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 10/e
Mountain Building “Tectonic Forces at Work”
Mr. Ahearn Earth Science 2010
LECTURE 9. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY II.
NC Geological History.
Geological time, Fossils, & Dinosaurs
LECTURE 11. EARLY MESOZOIC GEOLOGY.
LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.
HISTORY OF THE CONTINENTS
Chapter 10.
Sequencing Sedimentary Rock Layers
Harry Williams, Geomorphology
Harry Williams, Historical Geology
Determining the Age of Rocks
Presentation transcript:

LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. HISTORICAL GEOLOGY LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. Introduction The Paleozoic is long – 7 periods covering almost 300 million years. Therefore, we divide it into an early and late period. Cambrian + Ordovician + Silurian = early paleozoic (126 m.y) Devonian + Mississippian + Pennsylvanian + Permian = late paleozoic (165 m.y). Harry Williams, Historical Geology 1

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Both these "periods" have a similar geologic history characterized mainly by large scale transgressions and regressions, and orogenic events. Each period can be examined in terms of major factors that shaped the geologic record - these factors are: 1. Paleogeography 2. Transgressions and Regressions 3. Orogenies Why are these important?...... Harry Williams, Historical Geology 2

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 1. Paleogeography: Location of land and sea areas. Land - often erosion, non deposition; exception = back-arc basin sedimentation, coastal plains, arkosic sandstone, volcanics. Sea (including epeiric seas) - deposition of clastics and carbonates. Paleolatitude - refers to the location of the North American craton in relationship to the Equator and Poles. Controlled paleoclimate, rock types e.g. warm/hot climates -> carbonates, coral reefs, evaporates, sand dunes. Cold climates -> glacial deposits. Harry Williams, Historical Geology 3

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 2. Transgressions and Regressions Occurred mainly because of tectonic plate movements. TRANSGRESSION -> shallow ocean in PLATFORM areas ("Epeiric seas" - sea over a continent), which underwent DEPOSITION and formation of sedimentary rocks. REGRESSION -> land exposed - usually underwent EROSION (with some exceptions, including arkosic sandstones) and removal of rocks. Because marine conditions often meant deposition and terrestrial conditions often meant erosion, a major transgression followed by a regression created a sequence of strata capped by an UNCONFORMITY. (on board) Harry Williams, Historical Geology 4

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The green zone represents a cratonic sequence (rocks laid down during a transgression and regression). The lower boundary of the green zone is a transgression; the upper boundary is a regression. Harry Williams, Historical Geology 5

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The sequence is thicker and more complete near the craton edges since these areas are the first to be covered by the transgressing sea and the last to be uncovered by the regressing sea. The Paleozoic contains a number of these major depositional sequences - the SAUK in Cambrian time and the TIPPECANOE in Ordovician/Silurian time. OROGENIES Mostly resulting from plate convergence and continent-continent collisions. Mountain chains were constructed along craton margins, consisting of uplifted, folded, metamorphosed marine and terrestrial deposits - often accompanied by intrusive and extrusive igneous rocks (i.e. distinctive suites of rocks). These mountain chains were subject to erosion and became sediment sources for later deposits - shales + greywackes in deep marine basins; quartz sands and shales in shallow platform seas; fluvial sandstones and conglomerates in terrestrial areas (i.e. more rocks). Harry Williams, Historical Geology 6

1. Paleogeography 750 million years ago Late Cambrian (514 million years ago): Rodinia had broken up. The major land masses (Laurentia, Baltica, Kazakhstania, Siberia, China and Gondwana) were moving apart. 7

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The North American craton lay along the Equator during Cambrian time. Note: the outline of North America in it’s “upright” position is provided only as a frame of reference. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Appalachian seaway to the S.E./E. Cordilleran seaway to the W. CAMBRIAN 1. Paleogeography The North American craton lay along the Equator during Cambrian time. The climate was warm/hot. The craton land area was towards the “northeast” (today) and eroding. Shallow platform seas existed around the margins of the craton, especially in the south. The deposits forming in these seas were gradational from sand-shale-carbonate, depending on depth of water/distance from shore. The break-up of Rodinia had crated linear marine basins (seaways) around the edge of the craton: Appalachian seaway to the S.E./E. Cordilleran seaway to the W. Franklin seaway to the N. These were sites for SHALE deposition. Harry Williams, Historical Geology 9

DEEPER MARINE LIMESTONES 2. Transgressions/Regressions The Cambrian was a time of TRANSGRESSION - the SAUK TRANSGRESSION. As the coastline moved inland, a typical transgressive sequence was deposited: COASTAL SANDS SHALLOW MARINE SHALES DEEPER MARINE LIMESTONES A good example is provided by the Cambrian deposits exposed in the Grand Canyon: Old at bottom Young on top Harry Williams, Historical Geology 10

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Transgressivesequence: TEPEATS SANDSTONE (coastal sand) BRIGHT ANGEL SHALE (shallow marine shale) MAUV LIMESTONE (deeper marine limestone). Remember Lab 1? Harry Williams, Historical Geology 11

O: lower Cambrian. G: middle Cambrian O: lower Cambrian. G: middle Cambrian. The sequence records the transgression and the migration of the coastline from west to east.

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Due to the slow progress of the transgression, the same sequence did not develop everywhere at the same time. E.g. Bright Angel Shale is lower Cambrian in California; middle Cambrian in the Grand Canyon. This is an example of a “Diachronous Rock Unit” (a layer of rock of non-uniform age). Above: one layer of sandstone; younger to the left, older to the right. Harry Williams, Historical Geology 13

Sedimentary environments near the peak of the Sauk transgression (late Cambrian). This map shows inland areas where the late Cambrian coastlines would have been located. There are coastal sandstones, shallow marine shales and deeper marine carbonates. Orogenic activity is recorded by volcanic rocks.

The end of the Sauk transgression (Sauk regression) is marked by a widespread erosional unconformity, which in turn is overlain by the Tippecanoe cratonic sequence. The erosion is prominent above an uplift that formed in the craton.

Broad warping of the craton formed these basins and domes during and after deposition of these rocks. Other uplifts are related to orogenic activity.

Tepeats sandstone in the Grand Canyon records lower Cambrian Suak transgressive sands. St. Peter sandstone records middle Ordovician, Tippecanoe transgressive sands.

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Are there any lower Paleozoic rocks around DFW? Not exactly, they are west of Denton and they are upper Paleozoic (Pennsylvanian and Permian). They are in the Fort Worth Basin. Lower Paleozoic rocks are underneath them and are exposed around the Llano Uplift in the Hill Country. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Section through the western part of the Fort Worth Basin Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 3. Orogenies Harry Williams, Historical Geology 20

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 3. Orogenies The Cambrian was mostly a stable period for North America. The fragments of Rodinia were moving APART, so the edges of the craton were mainly PASSIVE MARGINS -> no convergence; no subduction; no orogenies. Harry Williams, Historical Geology 21