LECTURE 10. LATE 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
11.3 Mountains and Plates Mountains and Plates.
Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian Geology Eastern United States.
California Geologic History
Latest Precambrian / Early Paleozoic Supercontinent Rodinia, centered about the south pole, breaks apart. North America (Laurentia), Baltica, and Siberia.
Early Paleozoic.
Late Paleozoic Events CHAPTER 9. Late Paleozoic = Devonian, Mississippian, Pennsylvanian, and Permian (in North America) Late Paleozoic = Devonian, Carboniferous,
North American Geological History
Overview of Paleozoic History and Resulting Aquifers.
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.
Regional geology and tectonic history of Wyoming Geological Field Techniques Course.
EARLY PALEOZOIC EVENTS CAMBRIAN PALEOGEOGRAPHY Development of a shallow epeiric or epicontinental sea Continent situated on the equator, so waters most.
Mountain building & the evolution of continents
EARLY PALEOZOIC EVENTS ORDOVICIAN PALEOGEOGRAPHY Cratonic Sequences of
Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea
Earth: Geologic Principles and History FIRST EDITIONCHERNICOFF/FOX/TANNER.
THE DEVONIAN Life in the Devonian Sponges with glass skeleton Hydnoceras left Hindia above.
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.
The Devonian of New York. Devonian or Newyorkian? The International Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy visits New York State.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
Early Paleozoic. Periods of the Early Paleozoic ► Cambrian: mya ► Ordovician: mya ► Silurian: mya.
The History of the Earth The evolution of the 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.
Objectives Vocabulary
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.
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Mesozoic Era
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.
The Late Paleozoic World
Part 3 The Paleozoic era.
Harry Williams, Geomorphology1 TECTONIC REGIONS OF NORTH AMERICA The distribution of tectonic activity around continents (including North America) usually.
The Late Paleozoic Era Geology 103. Sea level changes Kaskasia transgression starts in Devonian, continues to the end of the Mississippian Absaroka transgression.
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.
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)
1 THE EARTH THROUGH TIME TENTH EDITION H A R O L D L. L E V I N © 2013 JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Harry Williams, Historical Geology1 PENNSYLVANIAN - PERMIAN. 1. Paleogeography The Pennsylvanian opened with the Kaskaskia Regression, which left a widespread.
Chapter 11 Late Paleozoic Events REPLACE FIGURE (Chapter opening art)
Early Paleozoic Events
North American Geological History. So what did we figure out about the East Coast so far? Proterozoic: suture zone, rifting Cambrian: passive margin Ordovician:
Coastal Plain Appalachian Highlands Laurentian Upland Interior Plains Interior Highlands Rocky Mountain System Colorado Plateau Basin and Range Columbia.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
6/23/2016AF Carpinelli 1 The Paleozoic World Life Takes Hold…
Wednesday October 27, 2010 (The Phanerozoic Eon).
California’s Geologic History. Location, location, location…  Three continental plates come together  Very complex history.
Part 4b: Stratigraphy and Tectonics of Silurian and Devonian Periods
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 10/e
Mountain Building “Tectonic Forces at Work”
Mr. Ahearn Earth Science 2010
LECTURE 9. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY II.
LECTURE 11. EARLY MESOZOIC GEOLOGY.
LECTURE 8. EARLY PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I.
Chapter 10.
Transgressions and regressions: the key to Earth history
Harry Williams, Geomorphology
Harry Williams, Historical Geology
The Late Paleozoic Era Geology 103.
Presentation transcript:

LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. HISTORICAL GEOLOGY LECTURE 10. LATE PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY I. The Late Paleozoic (Devonian-Mississippian-Pennsylvanian-Permian) is noted for a number of geologically significant events: Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology - widespread COLONIZATION of the land by large plants, reptiles and amphibians. - a number of major OROGENIES, including the ACADIAN (Devonian), the ANTLER (Mississippian), the HERCYNIAN (Mississippian), the ALLEGHENY (Pennsylvanian), OUACHITA (Pennsylvanian) and the SONOMA (Permian). - major non-marine deposits, including COAL beds (related to the development of LAND PLANTS), and sand dunes/evaporites (related to the widespread aridity of many parts of the northern continents. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology DEVONIAN - MISSISSIPPIAN 1. Paleogeography The North American craton had continued its counterclockwise rotation relative to the Equator. Most of the craton was still experiencing hot, tropical conditions. Carbonates were forming in the quieter regions of epeiric (platform) seas; clastics were being shed by the newly emergent mountainous areas along the orogenic belts; coral reefs and evaporites were forming in the more restricted shallow marine areas. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 2. Transgressions and Regressions The beginning of the Devonian is marked by the TIPPECANOE REGRESSION, causing widespread early Devonian erosion and leaving a major EROSIONAL UNCONFORMITY, used to identify the boundary between the TIPPECANOE and the KASKASKIA - the next major transgressive sequence. The rest of the Devonian is characterized by THE KASKASKIA TRANSGRESSION, which continued into the Mississippian. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The Kaskaskia transgression left coastal sands spread across New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia – the Oriskany Sandstone. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology In deeper water, shales formed (especially after the Acadian orogeny – which promoted vigorous erosion and mud production). A well-known example is the Chattanooga Shale of Tennessee. 'Black shales' are dark, as a result of being especially rich in unoxidized carbon (stagnant water, little oxygen).                                                                 Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Exposure of Chattanooga Shale. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 3. Orogenies The Late Paleozoic is noted for 3 major orogenic events: 1. THE ACADIAN OROGENY: the continental convergence that formed the Taconic Uplands of the Early Paleozoic continued into the Late Paleozoic as THE ACADIAN OROGENY. The Acadian Mountains run from Newfoundland right down the east coast to west Virginia. They consist of folded sedimentary and metamorphic rocks containing igneous intrusions. A major consequence of this mountain building was the formation of a very large clastic wedge spreading westward across the craton - THE CATSKILL WEDGE. Coarse terrestrial sediments in the east; fine-grained clastics and carbonates in the west. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The nonmarine sandstones and shales in this wedge are often deeply OXIDIZED (iron combines with oxygen - similar to rust), producing a red coloration - giving these beds a similar origin and appearance to the OLD RED SANDSTONES of Europe (many older buildings in eastern cities contain red sandstone blocks from the Catskill Wedge - “brown stones”). Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology Brownstones New York Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 2. THE ANTLER OROGENY: On the west coast, the island arc that formed back in the Ordovician had now been pushed up against the continent forming the highlands and volcanic activity of the ANTLER OROGENY, running through (what is now) Nevada, Idaho and into British Columbia. These mountains became source areas for clastics that spread across the western states in the Pennsylvanian and Permian. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology The mountainous west (Cordillera) was beginning to form. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology 3. THE HERCYNIAN OROGENY: The collision between Gondwanaland and the northern continents occurred slightly earlier in Europe than in North America. The result was the Late Mississippian HERCYNIAN OROGENY (roughly equivalent to the Allegheny Orogeny of North America, which occurred slightly later - in the Pennsylvanian). A great mountain chain was pushed up along the margins of Southern Europe. Some of the clastic wedges that formed around these mountains were covered by forest and went on to become some of the great European coal basins. Much of the Hercynian Mountain chain was subsequently eroded away - only small eroded stumps remain uncovered today. Harry Williams, Historical Geology

Harry Williams, Historical Geology