Title: Stratigraphy
1Stratigraphy
- The study of strata (layers) of rocks with an eye
toward interpreting the geologic history of the
region - Closely tied to dating methods
- Uses a variety of methods - fossils, stable
isotopes, paleomagnetics, sedimentary cycles - to
correlate and distinguish layers - Very important for oil exploration and mining
2Basin Analysis
- Use stratigraphic methods to work out sequence
and timing of deposition of rocks - usually sedimentary
- Synthesis of data from multiple disciplines
- sedimentology to determine environment of
deposition - paleontology to get time
- Used to be main objective
- Petroleum industry
3Correlation Correlation is determining that
rocks are the same formation (may mean rocks are
the same age)
C
A
B
C
B
A
4CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHY Geochronological units
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6LITHOFACIES
7Stratigraphic Contacts
- Contacts
- Plane or irregular surfaces between different
types of rocks - Separate units
- Conformable
- Unconformable
8Types of Contacts
- Conformable boundaries
- Conformable strata form unbroken depositional
sequences - Layers are deposited by uninterrupted
deposition - Abrupt or gradational
- Abrupt
- Sudden distinctive changes in lithology
- Often, local change
- Gradational
- Gradual change in depositional conditions with
time progressive gradual contact - One lithology grades into another
- e.g., ss becomes finer upsection until it becomes
a siltstone
9Lithostratigraphic units
- Supergroup
- Group
- Formation a mapable unit with distinctive
lithic characteristics - Member
- Bed
10Facies
- aspect or appearance
- Can be genetic (fluvial facies) or descriptive
(sandstone facies) - Lithofacies a constant lithological character
within a formation E.G an evaporite - Walther Law (1894)- facies that occur in
conformable vertical succession also occur in
laterally adjacent environments
11Preservation potential of rocks that are deposited
- Majority of sediments in fossil record
- Marine
- Most sub-aerial environments
- Erosional
- WHY?
- Accommodation space!
- Space available controls accumulation
- no place to put it, then no deposition
- base level
- balance between erosion and deposition
12Walthers Law of Correlation of Facies
- Relationship between vertical and lateral
variations - The fact that there is lateral variation in
facies leads to vertical variation in facies - Walthers Law of Correlation of Facies
- Lateral variations are expressed in the vertical
due to the succession of facies
13Walther's Law of Correlation of Facies
- Only those lithofacies which are a product of
sedimentary environments found adjacent to one
another in the modern can be occur superimposed
in continuous, uninterrupted stratigraphic
succession.
14Walthers Law Transgression-Regression
- Transgression
- Landward movement of shoreline (progessive
deepening) - Stand on beach
- Over time, you would be under water as shoreline
moved landward - Regression
- Seaward movement of shoreline
- (progessive shallowing)
- Results in lateral and vertical changes
15Transgression
- Geometric relationship of "graded, shore parallel
facies belts - Fining Upwards Sequence FUS
- More basin-ward facies overlie more landward
facies - Compared to depositional systems models
16Transgression and Regression
- Shallowing upwards, shoreline moves basinward
through time--gt Regression - Sea level drop /- uplift /- sediment supply
- Progradation
- excess sediment supply relative to accommodation
space - Forced Regression
- Relative sea level drop and formation of erosion
surfaces Unconformity (surface of subaerial
exposure) - Soils kaolinitized, clay-rich layers
- Angular discordance with underlying units
(disconformity) - Plant remains, rooted zones
- Non-genetic stratal relationships basinward
shift in sedimentary facies - Strata across lithologic boundaries NOT in
accordance with Walthers law
17Regression
- Geometric relationship of "graded, shore parallel
facies belts - Coarsening Upwards Sequence CUS
- More landward facies overlie more basin-ward
facies - Compared to depositional systems models
18Transgression - Regression
- What drives transgression/ regression?
- cant tell from this information!
- sea level change has so many components
- relative local
- eustatic global
- sediment supply
- can drive a regression/ transgression
- ONLY KNOW that shoreline has shifted position
- multiple factors responsible for sea- level
change - Say sea level rise or fall and you are WRONG!
- Say transgression or regression!
19Causes of Sea Level Change
Relative Change
Eustatic Change
20Sea Level Cycles
- 1st Order Cycles
- 100s my
- 100s of meters
- 2nd Order Cycles
- 10s my
- 100s of meters
- 3rd Order Cycles
- 1-10 my
- 10s of meters
Falling
Rising
21Biostratigraphy
If two rocks contain the same fossils they must
be the same age
22Evolution
- Variations exist within a population
- Result from mutations and other genetic accidents
- Some variations are advantageous but others are
not - Some are neutral
- Natural Selection works on these variations
- Characteristics of population shift through time
evolution
23Bio-Events
- First appearances of new species
- First appearances of new higher taxa
- Extinctions of species
- Mass extinctions of multiple taxa
- Bio-events are unique points in geologic time
24Index Fossils
- Some fossils are more useful than others for
relative age determinations - Fossils that are most useful are called INDEX
FOSSILS - What factors would maximize a fossils
usefulness? (i.e., What makes a good index
fossil?)
25Illustration of Principle of Faunal Succession
26What makes a good index fossil?
- Distinctive appearance/easy to recognize
- Short duration between first appearance and
extinction (a.k.a. RANGE) - Widespread geographic distribution (makes
correlation possible across a wide area/multiple
continents)
27Characteristics of Index Fossils
- Limited Stratigraphic Range
- Widespread Geographic Distribution
- Commonly Pelagic
- Or tolerant of a wide variety of environments
(found in many facies)
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- Unconformities
- Unconformities are surfaces in rock that
represent periods of erosion or non-deposition.
In other words, time has been left out of the
physical geologic rock record. - There are three (3) principal types of
unconformities - Angular Unconformity
- Rocks above and below unconformity have
different orientations. Shows that there was a
period of deformation, followed by erosion, and
then renewed deposition. Easiest of the three
types to recognize because the units are at an
angle truncated with the units above them.
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- Nonconformity
- Rocks in a horizontal fashion were eroded down
to igneous bedrock material at which time
subsequent deposition of sedimentary layers
commenced. Shows that there was a period of
deformation, followed by erosion, and then
renewed deposition. Represents the greatest
amount of time left out of the geologic rock
record. -
- Disconformity
- Rocks in a nearly horizontal fashion were eroded
and an erosional profile remains covered by
subsequent sedimentary deposition. Shows that
there was a period of erosion and then renewed
deposition in nearly horizontal layers. Most
difficult to recognize because the units are
nearly horizontal and only a small discontinuous
layer can be observed (rubble zone or soil
profile).
32Angular Unconformity
33Disconformity
34Nonconformity
35Unconformity Types Using Grand Canyon as Example
36Stratigraphic Thinking
From D. McConnell, Geologic Time, http//lists.uak
ron.edu/geology/natscigeo/Lectures/time/gtime1.htm
37One possible interpretation...
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39Look Bob a shooting star! Lets make a wish.
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41Were The Dinosaurs Failures?
- Dinosaurs 150,000,000 years
- Recorded History 5000 years
- For every year of recorded history, the dinosaurs
had 30,000 years - For every day of recorded history, the dinosaurs
had 82 years - For every minute of recorded history, the
dinosaurs had three weeks