Title: Early Paleozoic Events
1Chapter 10
2The Phanerozoic Eon
- Phanerozoic "visible life".
- 542 million years ago to the present
- Consists of three eras (from oldest to youngest)
- Paleozoic "ancient life" (542-251 m.y. ago)
- Mesozoic "middle life" (251-65.5 m.y. ago)
- Cenozoic "recent life" (65.5 m.y. ago -
present)
3Paleozoic Era
- The Paleozoic Era can be divided into
- Early Paleozoic Cambrian, Ordovician and
Silurian - Late Paleozoic Devonian, Carboniferous
(Mississippian Pennsylvanian in N. Amer.), and
Permian
4The Paleozoic Era
- The Paleozoic is characterized by long periods
of sedimentation punctuated by mountain building.
5- Paleozoic rocks of the platform are relatively
flat-lying to gently dipping. - Paleozoic rocks in the Ouachita-Appalachian
orogenic belt are folded, faulted, metamorphosed,
and intruded by granitic rocks.
6Paleozoic Rocks on the Platform
- Across the platform, in the continental
interior, Paleozoic strata are relatively
flat-lying to gently dipping, and warped into
basins, domes, arches, and broad synclines.
7Orogenic Belts
- Orogenic belts are present along the edges of the
continent. - In the orogenic belts, strata are intensely
deformed, with folding, faulting, metamorphism,
and igneous intrusions. - Deformation occurred as a result of continental
collision.
8Orogenies
- In the Appalachian region, there were three
Paleozoic mountain-building events (or
orogenies) - Taconic orogeny
- Acadian orogeny
- Alleghanian orogeny
9Paleozoic Paleogeography
- Paleogeography "ancient geography". The ancient
geographic arrangement of the continents. - Reconstructing the paleogeography requires
paleomagnetic, paleoclimatic, geochronologic,
tectonic, sedimentologic, and biogeographic
fossil data.
10Paleozoic Paleogeography
- 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. - Longitudes, however, cannot be determined (which
accounts for some of the differences in the
paleogeographic reconstructions).
11Paleozoic Paleoclimates
- Paleoclimatic evidence comes from
environmentally-sensitive sedimentary rocks
(glacial deposits, coal swamp deposits, reef
carbonates, evaporites). - The early Paleozoic climate was affected by
several factors - The Earth spun faster and had shorter days.
- Tidal effects were stronger because the Moon was
closer to Earth. - No vascular plants were present on the land.
12Neoproterozoic (Late Precambrian) Paleogeography
- Just before the Paleozoic began, the Precambrian
supercontinent, Rodinia, had rifted apart to form
six large continents and several smaller
continents.
13- Laurentia (North America, Greenland, Ireland, and
Scotland) - Baltica (Northern Europe and western Russia)
- Kazakhstania (between the Caspian Sea and China)
- Siberia (Russia east of the Ural Mtns and north
of Mongolia) - China (China, Indochina, and the Malay Peninsula)
- Gondwana (Africa, South America, India,
Australia, Antarctica)
The Continents
14- When continents are located on a pole, and
conditions are right, glaciers will form. - During glaciations, sea level is lowered
worldwide because the water is tied up in the ice
sheets. - Shallow epicontinental seas are unlikely during
glaciations.
15- By the Cambrian Period, the continents moved off
the pole. Some continents lie on the equator. - Glaciers melted, sea levels rose, and shallow
epicontinental seas flooded the continents.
16Epicontinental Seas
- Wave-washed sands, muds, and carbonates were
deposited in the shallow epicontinental seas. - The epicontinental seas were sites of major
diversification of marine life.
17Transgressions and Regressions
- Shallow epicontinental seas transgressed across
the Laurentian (North American) craton during the
Early Paleozoic as the glaciers melted and sea
level rose. The seas regressed as the glaciers
enlarged and sea level dropped.
18Transgressive-Regressive Sequences
- The transgression and regression of the seas
deposited sequences of sedimentary rocks that
reflect the deepening and shallowing of the
waters. These are called transgressive-regressive
sequences.
19Unconformities
- During regressions, the former seafloor was
exposed to erosion, creating extensive
unconformities that mark the boundaries between
the transgressive-regressive sequences.
20Cratonic Sequences
- The unconformities can be used to correlate
particular sequences from one region to another. - The unconformity-bounded sequences are sometimes
called cratonic sequences. - Two major transgressions occurred during the
Early Paleozoic in North America - Sauk sequence (older - primarily Cambrian)
- Tippecanoe sequence (Ordovician-Silurian)
21- North American cratonic sequences
-
- Green sedimentary deposits
- Yellow unconformities
22Unconformities
- Unconformities cover a greater time range near
the center of the craton. - Unconformities near the edge of the craton span
less time, if they are present at all. - This is because the edges of the craton are most
likely to remain flooded. - The center of the craton is flooded only during
times of major sea level high stands or
transgressions.
23Worldwide Sea Level Change
- Similar transgressive-regressive sequences are
found on other continents, suggesting that
worldwide sea level change caused the
transgressions and regressions. - Worldwide sea level changes were probably related
to glaciations and/or sea floor spreading. - During times of rapid sea floor spreading,
mid-ocean ridge volcanism displaces sea water
onto the continents.
24Cambrian Paleogeography
- No continents at poles. Continents are on
equator. - Shallow seas cover many of the continents.
- Evaporites within 30o N and S of equator - the
latitude at which deserts are present today. - Iapetus Ocean (or Proto-Atlantic) formed as
Laurentia drifted away from South America.
25Cambrian Paleogeography
- Laurentia is nearly covered by shallow
epicontinental seas. - Laurentia lies on the equator, so water is warm.
- Deposition of sand carbonate sediments
- Water deepens toward edges of continent, where
shale is deposited
26The Base of the Cambrian
- The base of the Cambrian was formerly identified
by the first-occurrence of shell-bearing
organisms such as trilobites. - In the 1970's, small shelly fossils were found
below the first trilobites, and dated at 544 m.y.
The small shelly fauna includes
sponge spicules, brachiopods,
molluscs, and possibly annelids.
27The Base of the Cambrian
- 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 542 m.y. using uranium-lead isotope dates from
rocks in Oman coinciding with a chemical anomaly
known as the "negative carbon-isotope excursion.
28Cambrian Sedimentary Deposits - The Sauk Sequence
- During the Cambrian, there were no vascular
plants on the land, so the landscape was barren.
Erosion was active and severe without plant roots
to hold the soil. - After the Neoproterozoic glaciation, the sea
transgressed onto the craton. - Shoreline (beach) deposition produced a vast
apron of clean quartz sand. - Carbonate deposition occurred farther from land.
29Cambrian Deposits of the Grand Canyon Region
- In the Grand Canyon region, the Lower Cambrian
Tapeats Sandstone is an example of the sandy
beach deposits unconformably overlying
Precambrian rocks.
30Cambrian Deposits of the Grand Canyon Region
- Tapeats Sandstone is overlain by Bright Angel
Shale, an offshore deposit. Bright Angel Shale is
overlain by Muav Limestone, deposited farther
from land.These rocks form a transgressive
sequence.
31Cambrian Deposits of the Grand Canyon Region
- These sedimentary units are diachronous (i.e.,
they cut across time lines). In each case, the
sedimentary units are older in the west than in
the east. The red lines are trilobite zones,
which approximate time lines.
32Cambrian Deposits of the Grand Canyon Region
- The three facies (sandstone, shale, and
limestone) coexisted and migrated laterally as
sea level rose. The Bright Angel Shale is Early
Cambrian in the west, and Middle Cambrian in the
east.
33Cambrian Deposits of the Grand Canyon Region
- Near the end of the Early Ordovician, the seas
regressed (due to glaciation). - The Muav Limestone was exposed to subaerial
erosion and a widespread unconformity developed.
34Comparison of Cambrian and Ordovician
Paleogeography
- LEFT Global paleogeography during the Cambrian
PeriodRIGHT Global paleogeography during the
Ordovician Period
35Ouachita Terrane
- The Ouachita Terrane or "Ouachita embayment
microcontinent" has broken off from
Laurentia/North America, and is headed for a
collision with South America in the Andes region.
This is the missing part of the Appalachian
Mountain chain between Alabama and Arkansas.
36Ordovician Paleogeography
- The Taconic Orogenic Belt lies between Laurentia
(North America) and Baltica (Europe and western
Russia) in the Ordovician.
37Ordovician Paleogeography
- Global sea levels were high. Shallow seas cover
large areas of some of the continents,
particularly North America (Sauk epicontinental
sea) and Siberia.
38Ordovician Carbonate Rocks
- In the Appalachian area, shallow water carbonate
rocks were deposited during the Cambrian and
early Ordovician. - Shallow water deposition is indicated by the
presence of mudcracks and stromatolites.
39End of Carbonate Deposition
- The depositional setting changed dramatically
during the Middle Ordovician. - Carbonate sedimentation ended.
- The carbonate platform in eastern North America
collapsed or was downwarped. - This was caused by the partial closure of the
Iapetus Ocean along a subduction zone.
40Volcanic Island Arc Collides with Eastern North
America
- As the Iapetus Ocean narrowed, a volcanic island
arc approached and collided with the North
American craton, causing folding, faulting,
metamorphism, and mountain building. - This mountain-building event in the Appalachian
region is called the Taconic orogeny. 480 - 460
m.y. ago.
41Ordovician Paleogeography
- Mountains and volcanoes were present in the
Appalachian region. - Volcanic ash deposits are found in Ordovician
rocks throughout the eastern U.S. (Now altered to
a clay called bentonite).
42- A - Eastern North America in the Cambrian and
early Ordovician, following the breakup of
Rodinia.B - Large volcanic island arc nears
eastern North America.C - Volcanic island arc
collides with eastern North America causing
Taconic orogeny.
43- The area in eastern North America that had been
deep water shales during the Cambrian was
deformed and uplifted to form the Taconic
mountain belt. - The shales were altered to metamorphic and
igneous rocks by the high temperatures and
pressures associated with mountain building
(orogeny).
44Upper Ordovician Sedimentary Deposits
- As the Taconic mountain belt eroded, Upper
Ordovician to Lower Silurian red sandstones and
shales were deposited to the west in huge delta
systems.
45Upper Ordovician Sedimentary Deposits
- These sediments formed a wedge-shaped deposit
known as the Queenston clastic wedge, or the
Queenston delta. Red deltaic sediments coarsen
and thicken to the east (toward the mountainous
source area), and become thinner and finer
grained to the west.
46Upper Ordovician Sedimentary Deposits
- The size of the clastic wedge suggests that the
mountains may have been more than 4000 m (13,100
ft) high. - There were two main highland areas the higher of
the two was in the northern Appalachians.
47Caledonian Orogenic Belt
- The Caledonian orogenic belt (which extends
along the northwestern edge of Europe) is part of
the same trend as the Taconic orogenic belt. - The Caledonian orogeny reached its climax
slightly later, in the Late Silurian to early
Devonian. - The Caledonian event is recognized in the
Canadian Maritime Provinces, northeastern
Greenland, northwestern Great Britain, and
Norway.
48Ordovician Glaciation
- By Middle Ordovician, Gondwanaland moved toward
the South Pole, leading to glaciation in Africa
at the end of the Ordovician. - Glacial deposits are present in NW Africa (Sahara
desert region), indicating that this region was
located in the South Pole region.
49Comparison of Ordovician and Silurian
Paleogeography
- Laurentia (North America) still sits on the
equator - The Iapetus Ocean is beginning to close as
Laurentia and Baltica converge. - Gondwanaland moves toward the South Pole.
50- Silurian sea levels were high worldwide.
- In Laurentia (North America), much of the craton
was flooded, indicating melting of the Late
Ordovician glaciers. - This was the second major transgression of the
Paleozoic, which deposited the Tippecanoe
Sequence.
51Silurian Paleogeography
- Mountains in eastern N. America are eroding.
- Sandstone conglomerate deposits.
- Widespread carbonate deposition.
- Deep marine deposits in NW and SE U.S.
- Reefs and evaporites.
52Silurian Sedimentary Deposits
- As the Tippecanoe Sea flooded North America,
deposition began with nearshore sands. - These include the famous
St. Peter Sandstone, an unusually
pure, well sorted, well rounded
quartz sandstone. - The Silurian Tuscarora Sandstone was deposited in
the central Appalachian region.
53Silurian Sedimentary Deposits
- Sandstone is overlain by extensive limestone
deposits, locally replaced by dolomite. - In eastern U.S., limestones are overlain by and
interbedded with shales along the periphery of
the Queenston delta. Niagara Falls is a classic
locality where these rocks are exposed.
54Silurian Michigan Basin Evaporites
- Near the end of the Tippecanoe sequence,
reef-fringed basins developed, such as the
Michigan Basin. - Evaporation led to the precipitation of immense
quantities of rock salt and gypsum within the
basin, indicating an arid paleoclimate. - Evaporite minerals total 750 m (2325 ft) thick in
the Michigan Basin.
55- Accumulation of thick evaporites requires
continual addition and evaporation of sea water,
indicating that the basin was connected to the
sea. - This restricted basin is called a barred basin
because it has a bar or sill between it and the
sea. - Sea water flows into the basin over the bar.
- Evaporation produces dense brines, which sink to
the bottom. When the brine becomes sufficiently
concentrated, evaporite minerals are
precipitated.
56 Silurian Iron Ore
- Economically important sedimentary iron ore
deposits accumulated during the Silurian in the
southern Appalachians, particularly around
Birmingham, Alabama. - Steel was produced for many years in Birmingham
from this iron ore. - Fuel was supplied by nearby Late Paleozoic coal
deposits. - Limestone, also found nearby, was used as flux in
the blast furnace.
57- In the Middle Silurian, shallow seas appear to
have covered more of the continents than at any
other time. - The epicontinental seas withdrew (regressed)
toward the end of the Silurian.
58Silurian Orogenic Activity
- Orogenic activity (mountain building) was more or
less continuous at one place or another during
the Silurian and Devonian. - The Caledonian orogeny was most intense in
Norway, as the Iapetus Ocean closed. - The folded rocks of the Caledonians end in
Ireland, but can be traced to NE Greenland,
Newfoundland, and Nova Scotia, Canada.