earth history geol 2110

19
Earth History GEOL 2110 The Paleozoic Era The Vendian, Cambrian, and Early Ordovician Periods

Upload: oni

Post on 23-Feb-2016

29 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Earth History GEOL 2110. The Paleozoic Era The Vendian , Cambrian, and Early Ordovician Periods. Major Concepts. The long-lived supercontinent of Rodinia created a long period between 1,000 – 600 Ma with little deposition in the interior of most continents. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Earth History GEOL 2110

The Paleozoic EraThe Vendian, Cambrian, and Early

Ordovician Periods

Page 2: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Major Concepts• The long-lived supercontinent of Rodinia created a long period

between 1,000 – 600 Ma with little deposition in the interior of most continents.

• The break-up of Rodinia, which started around 750 Ma resulted in great amounts of sediment deposited on the passive margins of the disassembled continents.

• In North America (Laurentia) great thicknesses of Vendian (610-550 Ma) to Cambrian (550-490 Ma) sediments accumulated along it continental edges.

• Between middle Cambrian time and early Ordovician time, the dispersal of the Rodinian plates resulted in a global rise in sea level, which flooded the continents with shallow seas.

• In North America, this is called the Sauk transgression and produced sedimentation of ultrapure quartz sands and later carbonates.

Page 3: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Assemblyof Rodinia

1200 – 750 Ma

Li et al., 2008

Page 4: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Li et al., 2008

Page 5: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Li et al., 2008

Disassemblyof Rodinia by a

Superplume750 Ma

Page 6: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Laurentia Becomes Modern-day AfricaSurrounded by Rifted Passive Margins

Page 7: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Mid-Cambrian Plate ReconstructionLaurentia becomes Isolated and Flooded

Laurentia

Baltica

Siberia

Gondwanaland

glaciation

Iapetus Ocean

Taconic Arc

Page 8: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Passive Margin SedimentationWestern US

Rift Basalts(750 Ma)Glacial Deposits

(Snowball Earth)

Page 9: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Thinning of Cambrian Sediments across the Laurentian Craton

Belt Supergroup sediments preserved in rift grabens (aulocogens)

Page 10: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Distribution of Cambrian Sediments over Laurentia

Warping of the Craton• Broad horizontal

tectonic stresses related to plate motion

• Sediment loading• Isostatic adjustments

due to different densities within the crust

MCR

Page 11: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Was Craton Warping Syn- or Post-Depositional?

Syn-depositional Warping

Post-depositional Warping

Page 12: Earth History  GEOL 2110

How do we tell Structure of the Crust?

Page 13: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Sedimentary Facies and Paleogeography of Late Cambrian Sedimentary Deposits

Page 14: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Ultrapure Quartz Cambrian Sandstone

95-99% Quartz

Well Rounded

Well Sorted

Jordan SS

MN/WI Strat Column

Page 15: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Depositional Environment

Shallow Marine or Eolian?

Low –angle cross stratification -Marine

Mod–angle cross stratification -Eolian

Abraided quartz grains - Eolian

BothEolian – early transport

Marine – final deposition

Page 16: Earth History  GEOL 2110

How Shallow is Shallow Marine?

Oolitic CarbonatesAgitated Water

Stromatolitic LimestoneFossilized Algal Mats

Tidal

Mud CracksPeriodic Drying

Flat-pebble ConglomeratesStorm Rip-ups

of the Seafloor

Page 17: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Modern Day Analog to the Sauk SeaGulf of Mexico

• <200 Meters Deep

• Carbonate deposition in detrital sediment starved areas

Differences• ¼ the area of Sauk Sea• Coral reefs not present until Silurian• No land vegetation in Cambrian - fine sediment winnowed from land by wind

Page 18: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Actualism Deposition accomplished mostly

by Hurricanes

“Fossil Hash” -Mass-kills from Hurricanes

Page 19: Earth History  GEOL 2110

Next Lecture

The Paleozoic EraPart 2: Late Ordovician Period

Limestone, Limestone, and more Limestone and The Emergence of the Appalachians