Title: Early Paleozoic Events
1Early Paleozoic Events
2In the Beginning (of the Paleozoic)
- Phanerozoic "visible life".
- Refers to rocks younger than the Precambrian.
540 m.y. ago to the presentConsists of three
eras (from oldest to youngest) - Paleozoic "ancient life
- Mesozoic "middle life
- Cenozoic "recent life"
- Early Paleozoic Cambrian, Ordovician and
Silurian - Late Paleozoic Devonian, Mississippian,
Pennsylvanian, and Permian
3Figure 3-38 (p. 85)Sedimentary facies
(lithofacies) developed in the sea adjacent to a
land area. The upper surface of the diagram shows
present-day facies, whereas the front face shows
the shifting of facies through time. Notice that
bottom-dwelling organisms also differ in
environments having different bottom sediment and
water depth.
4Figure 3-41 (p. 87)An illustration of Walthers
Principle, which states that vertical facies
changes correspond to lateral facies changes.
(After Brice, J. C., Levin, H. L., and Smith, M.
S. 1993. Laboratory Studies in Earth History, 5th
ed., Dubuque, IA William C. Brown.)
5Marine Transgression
- The rocks of each facies become younger
- in a landward direction during a marine
transgression
- One body of rock with the same attributes
- (a facies) was deposited gradually at different
times - in different places so it is time transgressive
- meaning the ages vary from place to place
younger shale
older shale
6Marine Regression
- During a marine regression,
- sea level falls with respect to the continent
- and the environments paralleling the shoreline
migrate seaward
7Marine Regression
- A marine regression
- is the opposite of a marine transgression
- It yields a vertical sequence
- with nearshore facies overlying offshore facies
- and rock units become younger in the seaward
direction
older shale
younger shale
8Sea Level Changes
9Paleogeography
- The ancient geographic arrangement of the
continents is referred to as paleogeography
("ancient geography"). - Reconstructing the ancient arrangement of the
continents requires paleomagnetic, paleoclimatic,
geochronologic, tectonic, sedimentologic, and
biogeographic fossil data. - Paleomagnetic evidence provides information on
the latitude at which the rocks formed. The
orientation of the continent can be determined
from the direction to the paleomagnetic pole, as
recorded by bits of iron in the rock.
10Paleogeography
- Longitudes, however, cannot be determined (which
accounts for some of the differences in the
paleogeographic reconstructions). - Paleoclimatic evidence comes from
environmentally-sensitive sedimentary rock types
(glacial deposits, coal swamp deposits, reef
carbonates, evaporites).
11Late Neoproterozoic Paleogeography
- Global paleogeography during the Late
Neoproterozoic, about 750 mya. Note that the
continents are joined, forming the supercontinent
Rodinia (or Proto-Pangea). Rodinia had begun to
rift apart. The surrounding ocean is Mirovia.
12Late Neoproterozoic Paleogeography
13Cambrian Paleogeography
- continents have moved off the South Pole
- Iapetus Ocean (sometimes called the
Proto-Atlantic) formed as Laurentia drifted away
from South America. - Note the Ouachita trough segment (green on the
map above), which separates off as a
microcontinent (see Middle Ordovician map), and
eventually converges with South America (orange).
14Cambrian Paleogeography
- Note that shallow seas cover many of the
continents. The evaporite deposits are clustered
within about 30 degrees north and south of the
equator. This is the latitude at which the great
deserts of the world occur today.
15Figure 8-2 (p. 269)Paleogeographic and tectonic
elements of North America during the Cambrian
Period, showing position of the Cambrian
paleoequator.
- Warm ocean waters
- The presence of stromatolites and mudcracks in
these carbonate rocks indicate deposition in
shallow water. - The water deepens toward the edges of the
continent, where deep water shale is deposited
(blue-green). Along the edge of the exposed land
mass (yellow), sand is deposited.
16Ordovician Paleogeography
- Continents distributed along the equator.
- Note the Ouachita Terrane
- Also note the Taconic Orogenic Belt between
Laurentia (North America) and Baltica (Europe and
western Russia).
17Ordovician Paleogeography
- global sea levels were high. Shallow seas nearly
cover many of the continents, - By the Middle Ordovician, Gondwanaland was moving
toward the south pole, which led to glaciation in
Africa at the end of the Ordovician.
18Figure 7-9 (p. 248)In its long history, the
Earth has experienced several major episodes of
widespread continental glaciation.
19Figure 8-27 (p. 289) Paleogeographic map of
Ordovician North America.
- In North America during the Ordovician, sea
levels were high, and the craton was flooded. - In the Appalachian area, the Cambrian and early
Ordovician were dominated by shallow water
carbonate deposition, as indicated by the
presence of mudcracks and stromatolites.
20Change in Ordovician Depositional Setting
- The depositional setting changed dramatically
during the Middle Ordovician. Carbonate
sedimentation ended. The carbonate platform
collapsed or was downwarped. - This was caused by the narrowing of the Iapetus
Ocean along a subduction zone. Large volumes of
black shales with graptolites, and immature
sandstones spread westward over the carbonate
rocks. As the Iapetus Ocean narrowed, a volcanic
island arc approached the North American craton,
leading to deformation and orogenic activity.
21Figure 8-24 (p. 286)Plate tectonic forces that
resulted in the Taconic orogeny. (Adapted from
Rowley, D. B. and Kidd, S. F. 1981. J. Geol. 89
199-218.)
22Compare Cambrian paleography to Ordovician
23Taconic Orogeny
- There are two main highlands areas, the higher of
the two is in the northern Appalachians. - Erosion of Taconic mountains created the
Queenston Delta (or clastic wedge)
24Silurian Paleogeography
- Note that the Iapetus Ocean is beginning to close
as Laurentia and Baltica converge.
25Figure 8-30 (p. 291) Paleogeographic map of
Silurian North America.
Shallow marine deposits formed in the
epicontinental sea, including carbonates with
reefs, and the Michigan basin evaporites. Note
the Silurian Tuscarora Sandstone in the central
Appalachian region.
26Early Paleozoic Sedimentary Deposits
- The Cambrian-Precambrian Boundary
- The base of the Cambrian was long identified by
the first-occurrence of shell-bearing organisms
such as trilobites. - In the 1970's, a distinctive group of small
shelly fossils was found below the first
trilobites in Siberia and elsewhere, and dated at
544 my. This small shelly fauna includes sponge
spicules, brachiopods, molluscs, and possibly
annelids.
27Tiny Early Cambrian fossils with shells from
Siberia.
28New classification of the Cambrian base
- The new classification of Lower Cambrian
chronostratigraphic units is based on the
discoveries of the small shelly fauna and a
variety of trace fossils. The base of the
Cambrian is now placed at the oldest occurrence
of feeding burrows of the trace fossil Phycodes
pedum, and dated radiometrically at 544 my using
uranium-lead isotope dates from rocks in NE
Siberia .
29Figure 8-7 (p. 271)The trace fossil Phycodes.
(After Crimes, T. P. 1989. Trace Fossils, in The
Cambrian- Precambrian Boundary. Oxford Monographs
on Geology and Geophysics 12. Oxford, England
Clarendon Press.)
30Early Paleozoic Sedimentary Sequences
- Transgressions and regressions of seas occurred
across North America in the Early Paleozoic as
the glaciers melted and enlarged. These sequences
are bounded by (or separated by) unconformities. - Lawrence Sloss used the sedimentary record across
the North American craton to divide the Paleozoic
rock record into unconformity-bounded sequences,
sometimes called cratonic sequences or Sloss
sequences.
31Early Pz Cratonic Sequences
- Two major transgressions occurred in North
America in the Early Paleozoic, which Sloss
named - Sauk sequence (older - primarily Cambrian)
- Tippecanoe (Ordovician-Silurian)
32Cratonic Sequences
- Similar sequences are found on other continents,
suggesting that worldwide (or eustatic) sea level
change was responsible for the transgressions and
regressions. - These eustatic sea level changes were probably
related to glaciations and sea floor spreading.
During times of rapid sea floor spreading, ridge
formation displaces sea water onto the
continents.
33Figure 3-42 (p. 88)Sloss sequences correspond
to Vail curves of global sea level change. Vail
curves are derived from seismic stratigraphic
profiles, which permit tracing of unconformities
across the craton and into thick continental
margin sedimentary rocks.
34Cambrian Sedimentary Deposits - Sauk Sequence
- During the Cambrian, there were no vascular
plants on the land, so the landscape was barren.
Erosion would have been active and severe without
plant roots to hold the soil. - Transgression of the sea onto the craton followed
the Neoproterozoic glaciaton. - Shoreline (beach) deposition produced a vast
apron of clean quartz sand. - Carbonate deposition occurred farther from land.
35Figure 8-9 (p. 274)Upper Cambrian lithofacies
map. (Simplified and adapted from Stratigraphic
Atlas of North America and Central America. Shell
Oil Company, Exploration Department.)
36Grand Canyon Region
- The Lower Cambrian Tapeats Sandstone is an
example of the sandy beach deposits unconformably
overlying Precambrian rocks - The Tapeats Sandstone is overlain by the Bright
Angel Shale, an offshore deposit. - The Bright Angel Shale is overlain by the Muav
Limestone, indicating deposition farther from the
land. - These rocks form a transgressive sequence.
37Cross section of Cambrian strata exposed in the
Grand Canyon. The red lines are trilobite zones,
which approximate time lines. Note that these
sedimentary units are diachronous (cut across
time lines). In each case, the sedimentary units
are older in the west than in the east.
38A Marine Transgression in the Grand Canyon
- Three formations deposited
- in a widespread marine transgression
- exposed in the walls of the Grand Canyon, Arizona
39Ordovician-Silurian Deposits - Tippecanoe
Sequence
- When the Tippecanoe Sea flooded North America, it
deposited the famous St. Peter Sandstone, an
unusually pure, well sorted, well rounded quartz
sandstone. - The sandstone is overlain by extensive limestone
deposits, locally replaced by dolomite. - In the eastern US, the limestones are overlain by
and interbedded with shales along the periphery
of the Queenston delta or clastic wedge. The
Niagara Falls area is a classic locality where
these rocks are exposed.
40Figure 8-15 (p. 278)Stratigraphic section (A)
and block diagram (B) of Niagara Falls. (Map
after E. T. Raisz.)
41Niagara Falls
42Tippecanoe Evaporites
- Near the end of the Tippecanoe sequence,
landlocked reef-fringed basins developed in the
Great Lakes area. - Michigan Basin.
- During the Silurian evaporation led to the
precipitation of immense quantities of rock salt
and gypsum within the basin, indicating an arid
paleoclimate.
43Figure 8-17 (p. 279) Isopach map showing
thickness and area of evaporite basins during the
late Silurian. Areas of evaporite precipitation
were surrounded by carbonate banks and reefs.
(Adapted from Alling, H. L., and Biggs, L. I.
1961. Bull. Am. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. 45 515-547.)
44Figure 8-18 (p. 280)Cross-section illustrating
a model for the deposition of evaporites in a
barred basin.
Sea water flows into the basin over the
partially-submerged barrier. Evaporation produces
dense brines, which sink to the bottom of the
basin and are unable to mix with open sea water.
When the brine becomes sufficiently concentrated,
evaporite minerals are precipitated.
45Early Paleozoic Tectonics
- Plate Tectonic Events (in order)
- Breakup of Rodinia (Proto-Pangaea)
- Oceanic closing and orogeny to form Pangaea
- Taconic orogeny
- Caledonian orogeny
- Acadian orogeny
- Alleghenian orogeny
- Hercynian orogeny
46Taconic Orogeny
- Taconic orogeny occurred in three phases
- Appalachian Mountains built in collision with
part of western Europe - compression folded shelf sediments into mountains
and Logan's thrust formed (48 km displacement) - Giant granite batholiths produced by Taconic
melting
47Appalachian Mobile Belt
- Evolution of the Appalachian mobile belt
- Late Proterozoic opening of Iapetus Ocean
- with passive continental margins
- and large carbonate platforms
48Appalachian Mobile Belt
- Middle Ordovician transition to convergence
resulted in orogenic activity
49Early Paleozoic Climate
- Transgressions generally mild climate
- Regressions harsher, more diverse climates