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Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea

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1 Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea
Paleozoic Geology Floods, Glaciers, and The Birth of Pangea

2 Paleozoic Late Middle Early Myr

3 Key Events of the Paleozoic
Six major continents formed by the breakup of Rodinia converge to form Pangea Sea Level rose to cover large sections of the continents four times Two major Ice Ages chilled the planet Life diversified and moved to the land, but was also “set back” by three major extinctions

4 1. The Growth of Pangea

5 Important Continents & Terrains, & Oceans of the Paleozoic
Laurentia - North America Baltica - Europe Laurasia - formed by combination of Laurentia and Baltica Siberia - Siberia Gondwana - Africa, S. America, India, Ausralia, Antarctica Pangea - late Paleozoic supercontinent Taconic Arc - Volcanic Arc in the Iapetus Ocean Avalonia - Microcontinent including England Panthalasia Ocean - pre-Pacific Ocean Iapetus Ocean - pre-Atlantic Ocean

6 Precambrian - Rodinia Montana New York

7 Gondwana & Laurentia About 500 Myr

8 Map Symbols Trench (Subduction Zone) Spreading Center (Divergent Zone)
Orogony (Collision Zone)

9 Cambrian Siberia Gondwana Laurentia Baltica

10 Ordovician

11 Silurian

12 Taconic Orogoney

13

14 Paleozoic “Clastic Wedges” of sediment form behind collision zone

15 Upper Ordovician Clastic Wedge
Why does a deep basin form? Isostasy

16 Devonian

17 Mississippian

18 Pennsylvanian

19 Permain

20 Appalachian Mountains

21 Important Paleozoic Orogenies
Orogeny Age What collided Taconic Sil. Taconic Arc with Larentia Caledonian Dev Larentia with Baltica (forming Laurasia) Acadian Dev. Avalonian Terrane with Laurasia Ural Penn. Siberia with Baltica Hercynian European part of Laurasia with Gondwana Alleganian Penn/ Perm N. part of Laurasia with Gondwana (forming Pangea) Ouachita Southern part of Laurasia with Gondwana

22 2. The Rise and Fall of the Sea

23 “The Sea Come In, the Sea Goes Out”
4 3 2 Transgression Regression 1

24 Sedimentary Sequences of NA
Blue = No deposition

25 Highs and Lows Early Devonian Late Ordovician (Tippecanoe Sequence)

26 Cyclothems Evidence of changing Sea Level

27 Causes of Sea Level Change
Local Sea Level Change Local Tectonic Movement Global (Eustatic) Sea Level Change Ice Ages (water is trapped in ice) Rate of plate divergence at mid-ocean ridges

28 3. Changing Climate Evidence for Climate Change
Rocks - Tillites, evaporites, coal, carbonates, etc. Fossils - Different species live in different climates Warning - What else could rocks & fossils record? Movement of plates

29 Evidence for Permian Climate
Evaporites Evidence for Permian Climate Coal

30 5 Paleozoic Ice Ages 4 3 2 1

31 Causes of Ice Ages Changes in the balance between how much heat the Earth and how much it loses How heat is distributed on the Earth

32 What Causes Ice Ages Changes in Position of the Continents
Polar continents = place to make glaciers Restricted ocean basins = colder Changes in Sea Level Higher = more shallow water = hotter Mountain ranges / timing of Orogenies Mountian growth = colder Change in Atmospheric Chemistry Greenhouse gases = hotter

33 By the Permian it got hot & stayed that way for a while
Evaporites By the Permian it got hot & stayed that way for a while Coal

34 Mass Extinctions: Death and Destruction

35 The Five Big Extinctions
When (End of…) Species Loss** Major Loses to Ordovician 85 ±3% Brachiopods & bryozoans Devonian 83 ± 4% Rugose & tabulate corals, armored* & jawless fish Permian 95 ± 2% All life! - Trilobites*, corals*, blastoids* Triassic 80 ± 4% Most synapsids Cretaceous 76 ± 5% Dinosaurs, marine reptiles, ammonites *Went extinct, **From Jablonski (1991,1995)

36 Causes of Mass Extinctions
Major environmental change - to fast for species to adapt Such as: Meteorite impacts Massive global eruptions Rapid climate change Major sea level fluctuations

37 Paleozoic Causes: Leading Hypotheses
Ordovician - related to ice ages? -lowering sea level -cooling climate Devonian -related to the buildup of land plants -ultimately creating anoxic conditions in the ocean Permian - Formation of Pangea -loss of shallow marine environment -climate change -Massive volcanic eruptions -Comet impact

38 Survivors set the stage for the next “Age”
Adaptive Radiation

39 Key Events of the Paleozoic
Six major continents formed by the breakup of Rodinia converge to form Pangea Sea Level rose to cover large sections of the continents four times Two major Ice Ages chilled the planet Life diversified and moved to the land, but was also “set back” by three major extinctions


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