Title: Chapter 11 Late Paleozoic
1Chapter 11 - Late Paleozoic
- Mountain building events that began with the
Taconic Orogeny continued throughout remainder of
Paleozoic. Events are preserved in the rock
record as part of the building of Pangaea. - Silurian (438 to 408 m.y.) - Laurentia and
Baltica collided along a convergent plate
boundary to form the larger continent of
Laurasia. This collision closed the northern
Iapetus Ocean the Caledonian orogeny.
22
Silurian Period peak of Tippecanoe
inundation, prior to initiation of Caledonia
uplift. Majority of craton covered by
epeiric sea with carbonate bottom conditions.
33
Devonian Period The presence of widespread reefs
and evaporite deposits indicate the climate was
uniformly warm and mild
world-wide, and generally dry.
Laurentia/Baltica collision uplift of
Caledonian Highlands Acadian Orogeny
http//www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Devonian/Devonian
.htm
44
- Devonian Period (408 to 360 m.y.)
- Mountain building continued along the eastern
margin of Laurentia with the Acadian orogeny
(Laurentia Baltica collision Laurasia). - Acadian Orogeny rejuvenation of highlands, more
active in present NE portion of continent,
renewed deposition of clastic wedge to NW
Catskill Delta, similar to Queenston Delta. - Antler Orogeny marked change in Cordilleran
(west continent) from a passive to an active
margin. - Kaskaskia Sequence deposition began with gradual
inundation during the early Devonian Period.
55
- Kaskaskia Sequence basal sediments include
clean quartz sands containing heavy mineral
deposits. - Clastics derived from Acadian Highlands from two
source areas 1) Older sedimentary units of east
and north (tourmaline, zircon rutile) 2)
Igneous and metamorphic origin from highlands
(unstable pyroxene, amphibole, biotite garnet) - Continuing transgression resulted in lime-muds
and reef complexes. Locally restricted sites
accumulated salt gypsum. - Late Devonian Black Shales near "eastern" craton
(across transcontinental arch) are black shales
(O2 - deficient waters Chattanooga shale 10 m
thick). - Result of orogenic activity (Acadian Orogeny),
shales contain uranium radiometrically dated at
350 MY BP. - Source http//www.colby.edu/personal/r/ragastal/G
E142/142LatePaleo.htm
66
- The extent of the upper Devonian and Lower
Mississippian Chattanooga Shale and its
equivalent units such as the Antrion Shale, the
Albany Shale, the Percha Shale (Franklin Mts.)
Black shales petroleum source rocks elevated
uranium
77
Mississippian Period Paleogeography was
controlled by sea-level changes and long-wave
tectonic irregular deformation of topography.
The climate was generally
warm. Williston Basin - restricted circulation
salt gypsum.
http//www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Carboniferous/Car
boniferous.htm
88
- Mississippian Period -
- Erosion of Acadian Highlands NW growth of
Catskill Delta with deposition of non-marine
shales and sandstones (e.g., Pocono Group). - Reduction in suspended mud results in extensive
limestone platforms during Mississippian, west of
the highlands. Platform carbonates present in
Georgia Valley Ridge, e.g., Bangor Ls., St.
Genevieve Ls., similar to Bahama Banks - Western Craton - Limestone, shale, and reef
deposition, e.g., Miss. Redwall Limestone Grand
Canyon Lake Valley Limestone New Mexico.
Antler Highlands yielded clastics. - Late Mississippian regression associated with
initiation of Gondwana glaciation. - Source http//www.colby.edu/personal/r/ragastal/G
E142/142LatePaleo.htm
99
- Late Mississippian regression of the Kaskaskia
Sea from the craton, carbonate deposition was
replaced by vast quantities of detrital
sediments. The resulting sandstones, e.g.,
Illinois Basin, are excellent petroleum
reservoirs. - The widespread disconformity between the
Kaskaskia and Absaroka sequences reason for
Mississippian Pennsylvanian divisions of
Carboniferous Period (European useage). - Earliest Absaroka clastics deposited from
re-emerging Appalachian Ouachita highlands,
thin to northwest. Further northwestward
marine clastics and carbonates.
10Southward drift of Gondwana triggers global
cooling (glaciers) low sea level. Collision of
Laurasia Africa Alleghenian
Orogeny, rejuvenation of
highlands clastic wedge.
10
Broad clastic wedges tectonic fluctuations
Pennsylvanian Period
different types of deposition from Kaskaskia.
1111
- In the transition zone between the clastic
wedge and shallow marine deposits, sea level
tectonic fluctuations resulted in deposition of
cyclothems, i.e., local repetitive sedimentary
sequences. - A typical coal-bearing cyclothem from the
Illinois Basin contains (slide 12) - Nonmarine sandstones, shales
- Capped by a coal unit and
- Overlain by marine units
- Modern coal swamps - the Mississippi Delta, the
Okefenokee Swamp, the Florida Everglades, and the
Dutch Lowlands, Mekong Delta. - Study of modern examples helps understand ancient
environments.
Deltaic Fluvial conditions
1212
Columnar section of complete Cyclothem.
Sudden sea level changes or erosion may truncate
sequences.
Deepest water
1313
Idealized depositional model for cyclothems.
During Stable Sea Level or Regression, sediments
prograde into basin.
Progradation looks like Regression in rock record.
1414
Principal Pennsylvanian highland areas
basins of the southwestern part of the craton.
1515
Pennsylvanian Ancestral Rocky Mountains
Erosion of PreCamb. Basement red arkosic
sandstones.
Unusual intra-cratonic compressional event
high-angle reverse vertical faults.
1616
Permian Period Continental uplift continued
glaciation of Gondwana reduced cratonic seas to
western part of craton. Restricted basin KS
OK deposition of salt gypsum.
http//www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Permian/Permian.h
tm
1717
Cimarron River bluffs, OK Permian-age
gyp-sum overlying continental red beds (shales,
siltstones).
Gypsum beds
1818
Alabaster Caverns, Woodward, OK Permian
gypsum dissolved by groundwater.
1919
Permian Basin
Capitan Reef
Reservoir rocks
Absaroka Sea during Permian - formed an
inter-related complex of lagoons, reefs, and
open-shelf environments
Source rocks
Lagoons behind reefs limestones, evaporites,
red beds. Restricted sediments evaporites in
basins.
2020
- Western craton (Cordilleran) was a passive
margin Late Proterozoic to Early Paleozoic. - Beginning in the Middle Paleozoic - an island arc
formed off the western margin of the craton. - Antler Orogeny collision of island arc with
craton Late Devonian/Early Mississippian.
From the Antler Orogeny, the western margin
remains an active margin.
2121
- The final eastern margin tectonic event
Ouachita Orogeny. Ouachita Mobile Belt is 80
covered by Mesozoic Cenozoic sediments, exposed
in Ouachita Arbuckle Mts. of AR OK and the
Marathon Mts. of Big Bend area, TX. - Pre-Mississippian rocks passive margin and deep
water sediments, including novaculite
(fine-grained chert) in AR and Marathon Mts. and
turbidites in the Marathon Mts. - Orogeny began during Mississippian Period.
- Ouachita, Appalachian, Hercynian Mobile Belts are
continuous along the eastern margin. - Microplates caught between continents were
involved in the collision.
22- Increased metamorphic and igneous activity
indicates that the Acadian orogeny was more
intense and of longer duration than the Taconic
orogeny. Radiometric dates from the meta-morphic
and igneous rocks associated with the Acadian
orogeny cluster between 360 and 410 million years
ago. - Acadian folding thrusting produced angular
unconformities separating Upper Silurian from
Mississippian rocks. - Catskill Delta rocks consist of red
conglomerates, sandstones, and shales
equivalent to the Old Red Sandstone of British
Isles. Both have similar fossil fish, early
amphibians, and plants.
23- Taconic, Caledonian, and Arcadian orogenies were
all part of the same broad orogenic event,
related to the closing of the Iapetus Ocean. - This event culminated with a continental-continent
al collision during the Acadian oro-geny as
Laurentia and Baltica became sutured. - Late Paleozoic orogenies - Hercynian,
Alle-ghenian, and Ouachita represent the final
joining of Laurasia and Gondwana into the
supercontinent Pangaea. Granite age-dates in
Ga., NC range from 325 to 300 m.y.. - Microplates (exotic terranes), e.g., Avalonia,
Piedmont become part of mobile belts, account for
some geologic inconsistencies within mountain
ranges.
24United States Coal Deposits.