The Late Paleozoic Era Geology 103. Sea level changes Kaskasia transgression starts in Devonian, continues to the end of the Mississippian Absaroka transgression.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13 Earth’s History Who is Stan Hatfield and Ken Pinzke.
Advertisements

Latest Precambrian / Early Paleozoic Supercontinent Rodinia, centered about the south pole, breaks apart. North America (Laurentia), Baltica, and Siberia.
Late Paleozoic Events CHAPTER 9. Late Paleozoic = Devonian, Mississippian, Pennsylvanian, and Permian (in North America) Late Paleozoic = Devonian, Carboniferous,
Harz Excursion – March 2006 (or…. where are these crazy geologists taking us??!!!) The Harz Mountains….. - Mittelgebirge – “low mountain range” - 180km.
Life and Geologic Time.
3/19/12 - Bellringer What associations are there when…
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
GEOLOGICAL TIME PROJECT
Geologic Time.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Part 5b: Geological History of Gondwanaland and Late Paleozoic Life.
Mesozoic Geology Beginning of the Modern World. Mesozoic Myr.
Physical Science Geologic Time.
Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea
Paleozoic Geology Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea.
Cenozoic Mammals and the Modern World. Cenozoic 65-0 Myr.
Ordovician EARLY PALEOZOIC LIFE. Silurian EARLY PALEOZOIC LIFE.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
THE LATE PALEOZOIC THE CARBONIFEROUS MY
Chapter 14 Mesozoic Earth History Million years ago Triassic Jurassic Cretaceous.
The Permian Mass Extinction. What causes extinctions? 1.Competition from other organisms -Everything needs some space to live. -If there isn’t enough.
The History of the Earth The evolution of the continents.
I will examine the evidence for the theory of plate tectonics
Earth’s History. Origin of the Earth Nebular Hypothesis –Bodies of our solar system condensed from an enormous cloud –Cloud began contracting, spinning,
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.
Objectives Vocabulary
Late Paleozoic Geology. Includes Devonian, Carboniferous, & PermianIncludes Devonian, Carboniferous, & Permian.
Geologic Time Scale (Earth is 4.6 billion years old)
Developed by: TESSE Graduate Student Fellows Penn State University Coal and Plate Motion.
Objectives Vocabulary
PALEOZOIC ERA (542 Mya Mya) Andrea Villalba, Fabiola Ferrabone, Alfredo de Obaldia, Nicole Cortez.
PALEOZOIC ERA Age of sea-life. CAMBRIAN 542 mya Gondwanaland- mainly in S. Hemisphere “waterworld”
Paleozoic Era.
Thurs, Nov 17 th CW: Geologic Time HW: Study for quiz Why are there no fossils in layer F?
Earth Science 13.2B Paleozoic Era : Life explodes
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era Carboniferous and the Permian Periods in North America.
Early Paleozoic Earth History
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.
The Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras
Historical Geology Lecture 16 The Middle Paleozoic Era.
Earth History.
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 HISTORICAL GEOLOGY LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. The Late Paleozoic (Devonian-Mississippian- Pennsylvanian-Permian)
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 PENNSYLVANIAN - PERMIAN. 1. Paleogeography The Pennsylvanian opened with the Kaskaskia Regression, which left a widespread.
Plate Tectonics Many forces cause the surface of the Earth to change over time. However, the largest force that changes our planet’s surface is the movement.
Early Earth Chapter 15. Earth Forms Scientists hypothesize that Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago. They also believe that Earth started as a ball.
 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:
Why the Success of "Jurassic World" Matters to Science - YouTube Why the Success of "Jurassic World" Matters to Science - YouTube.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
6/23/2016AF Carpinelli 1 The Paleozoic World Life Takes Hold…
Wednesday October 27, 2010 (The Phanerozoic Eon).
PALEOZOIC Ch 10 & 11.
Tectonics from the Cambrian into the Future
The Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic Eras
Geologic Time Unit 8.5.
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
A Quick Look at the History of Life on Earth Part 2
The Paleozoic.
What is Mass Extinction?
LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.
LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Mar 4, The Earths Beginning million years ago - Precambrian Era
The Late Paleozoic Era Geology 103.
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Presentation transcript:

The Late Paleozoic Era Geology 103

Sea level changes Kaskasia transgression starts in Devonian, continues to the end of the Mississippian Absaroka transgression begins in Pennsylvanian, continues to Triassic

Late Paleozoic plate configuration Basically, Pangea is assembling Gondwana still exists (over South Pole for most of this) and Laurentia is equatorial

End Paleozoic plate configuration At end of Paleozoic, Pangea is complete Tethys ocean begins opening in the east

Acadian orogeny continues through Devonian To the north, Laurentia + Baltica = Laurasia To the south, an island continent called Avalonia accretes onto southern Laurentia

Catskill clastic wedge and some crystalline rocks are all that remain When the meter mountains are eroded away, all that remains are: their crystalline roots, both metamorphic and intrusive igneous Their erosion products in the clastic wedge

Roots of mountain ranges

Alleghenian/Ouchitan orogeny – Miss. - Permian Alleghenian orogeny is a result of a collision between parts of northern Laurasia and Gondwana, which spread southward to present-day Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Venezuela (Ouchitan orogeny)

Ancestral Rockies orogeny Around the same time (Miss. – Permian), compressive forces in the middle of Laurasia created a series of ranges and basins (the ancestral Rockies) Many basins become oil-producing regions (Big Horn Basin), not just in North America (Perm Basin, Russia)

Western North America has been quiet since the Antler orogeny, but in Permian, Sonoma orogeny begins

Late Paleozoic life diversifies but is marked by two extinctions End of Mississippian End of Permian (greatest of all extinctions) – 90% of marine species and 70% of land species go extinct

Mississippian in Laurentia was characterized by extensive limestones Crinoids (modern sea lilies), blastoids, bryozoans and fusilinid forams

Reconstruction of Mississippian sea floor

Tetrapod evolution Some fish had developed lungs Changes to fin structure led to feet – land animal Transitional form – Tiktaalik (375 my)

Amniote egg evolution Amnion = “membrane around fetus” Group within tetrapods that produce eggs that are surrounded by membrane(s) First of this type around 340 my Synapsids (which lead to mammals) and sauropsids are part of these

Tetrapod cladogram

Pennsylvanian in Laurentia was a time of extensive coal deposition To make so much coal, lots of carbon dioxide was “scrubbed” from the air Atmospheric CO 2 drops to a tenth of previous (about modern day values)

Massive CO 2 drop may have removed some greenhouse warming, resulting in mid- Carboniferous ice age

Deposition of cyclothems Cyclic sedimentary “package” of rocks, ranging from coal to limestone Each cycle represents about 400,000 yr The standard interpretation is that there are small transgressions and regressions at coastal regions where there are swamps

Permian in Laurentia was a time of extensive deserts Pangean continental interiors were dry, so extensive deserts and dunefields formed Result are arenites with huge (meter-scale) cross-beds

Therapsids, ancestors of mammals Division of synapsids Still are reptiles but have some mammalian characteristics like hair, lactation and erect posture “apsid” = arch, typically over a hole in the skull (“fenstra”)

Almost for naught – Permian extinction which occurs in less than 1 million years

Causes of P/T extinction – climate change Supercontinent interior generates extremes in temperature – 50°C average temperature in the interior Habitable areas reduced

Causes of P/T extinction – climate change At Hallett Cove, South Australia, among other sites, extensive glacial striations exist in exposed bedrock of end Permian times Worldwide glaciation was already occuring regularly during Permian Regressions caused by glaciations remove habit on continental shelf

Causes of P/T extinction – massive vulcanism Siberian traps are a region of huge outpourings of basaltic lava around the end of the Permian Increase CO 2 in atmosphere, as well as dust

How does a massive volcanic eruption cause enough climate change for a mass extinction? Initial temperature rise due to eruption CO 2 increase warms oceans enough to exsolve trapped methane from ocean floor, which increases the warming

Causes of P/T extinction - impacts Potential impact sites of the right timing in Australia and Antarctica Identified through presence of shocked quartz and stishovite, a high pressure form of quartz