Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byOswin Richard Modified over 9 years ago
1
Cenozoic Era Geologic Time
2
Eons: Hadean ▫4.5-3.8 bya Archaean ▫3.8-2.5 bya Proterozoic ▫2.5 bya – 543 mya Phanerozoic 543 mya- present
3
At only 66 million years long, the Cenozoic is only 1.4% of all geologic time ▫or only 20 minutes on our hypothetical 24- hour clock for geologic time Geologic Time in 24-hours
4
When the Cenozoic began, semitropical (angiosperm) forests covered much of North America, and many mammals dwelled in these forests Many event that began during the Cenozoic continue to the present, including ▫the ongoing erosion of the Himalayas in Asia and the Andes in South America, ▫ the origin and evolution of the San Andreas fault, ▫and the origin of the volcanoes that make the Cascade Range. Cenozoic Events
5
Geologists divide the Cenozoic Era into two periods of unequal duration ▫The Paleogene Period 66 to 23 million years ago includes Paleocene, Eocene, and the Oligocene epochs ▫The Neogene Period 23 million years to the present Includes Miocene, Pliocene, Pleistocene, Holocene epochs Older system: ▫Tertiary and Quaternary periods Neogene and Paleogene
6
Vast exposures of Cenozoic sedimentary and igneous rocks in western North America ▫record the presence of a shallow sea in the continental interior, ▫terrestrial depositional environments, ▫lava flows, ▫and volcanism on a huge scale in the Pacific Northwest. Cenozoic Rocks Are Accessible
7
Paleocene Fort Union Formation, Montana
8
Wasatch Formation, Bryce Canyon
9
Miocene Lovejoy Basalt, California
10
The progressive fragmentation of Pangaea accounts for the present distribution of Earth's landmasses Because the geographic locations of continents profoundly influence the atmosphere and hydrosphere, moving plates also directly affect the biosphere Cenozoic Plate Tectonics
11
During the Triassic Period Paleogeography of the World
12
During the Jurassic Period Paleogeography of the World
13
During the Late Cretaceous Period Paleogeography of the World
14
Spreading ridges such as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East Pacific Rise were established, along which new oceanic crust formed and continues to form However, the age of the oceanic crust in the Pacific is very asymmetric, because much of the crust in the eastern Pacific Ocean basin has been subducted beneath the westerly moving North and South America plates Spreading Ridges
15
Age of Ocean Basins
16
Eocene Epoch Cenozoic Paleogeography of the World
17
Miocene Epoch Cenozoic Paleogeography of the World
18
Present Day Cenozoic Paleogeography of the World
19
Another important plate tectonic event ▫Northward movement of the Indian plate and its eventual collision with Asia Simultaneous northward movement of the African plate ▫Caused the closure of the Tethys Sea ▫Causes tectonic activity that currently takes place int an east–west zone from the Mediterranean through northern India End of the Tethys
20
North and South America continued their westerly movement as the Atlantic Ocean basin widened Subduction zones bounded both continents on their western margins ▫Situation changed in North America as it moved over the northerly extension of the East Pacific Rise and it now has a transform plate boundary Americas Move West
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.