The Proterozoic Eon - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

The Proterozoic Eon

Description:

The Midcontinent Rift and the Keweenawan Sequence ... overlying Animikian rocks or crystalline basement, the Keweenawan consists of: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1944
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: NVCC5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Proterozoic Eon


1
The Proterozoic Eon
  • CHAPTER 7

2
Proterozoic- Last chapter of Precambrian time
  • The Proterozoic boundary is placed _at_ 2.5 By,
    mostly arbitrarily
  • Essentially modern plate tectonic activity
  • Archean cratons provide basis for continental
    development and attachment (accretion)
  • Extensive plutonism/metamorphism and reworking of
    crustal rocks through orogeny

3
The Length of the Proterozoic
  • the Proterozoic Eon alone, at 1.955 billion years
    long, accounts for 42.5 of all geologic time yet
    we review this long episode of Earth and life
    history in a single section

4
The Phanerozoic
  • Yet the Phanerozoic, consisting of
  • Paleozoic,
  • Mesozoic,
  • Cenozoic eras,
  • lasted a comparatively brief 545 million years

5
Proterozoic Eon can be divided into three eras
  • Paleoproterozoic Era (2.5 - 1.6 by ago)
  • Mesoproterozoic Era (1.6 to 1.0 by ago)
  • Neoproterozoic Era (1.0 by ago to the beginning
    of the Paleozoic, 540 my ago)

6
North American continental developments
  • Precambrian provinces of North America were
    welded together to form a large continent called
    Laurentia during the early Proterozoic.
  • Welding occurred along mountain belts or orogens
    by 1.7 by.
  • Laurentia continued to grow by accretion
    throughout the Proterozoic.
  • Sedimentation on and around the craton consisted
    of clastic and carbonate sediments deposited in
    shallow water on broad continental shelves and
    epeiric seas.

7
Precambrian provinces of North America
8
Wilson Cycle
  • A complete Wilson cycle involves
  • Fragmentation of a continent
  • Opening followed by closing of an ocean basin
  • Finally, reassembly of the continent
  • Many example (more abundant) in Phanerozoic

9
Wopmay Orogen
  • Some of the rocks in Wopmay orogen show
  • An assemblage of rocks typical of passive
    continental margins that first become widespread
    during the Proterozoic

10
Ocean formation/closure
  1. See examples of tensional faulting- where ocean
    began after being ripped apart
  2. Alluvial fans develop lava comes up through
    these faults (interspersed with sediments)
  3. Ocean widened
  4. Closure of ocean buckled sediments producing
    trough for further sedimentation crumpled rocks
    as buckled

11
Figure 7-4 (p. 244)Location of the Labrador
Trough and Trans-Hudson Orogen.
Trans-Hudson Orogen
12
Labrador Trough
  • East of the Superior province are rocks
    indicating deposition on a continental shelf,
    slope, and rise of the craton.
  • These rocks were folded, metamorphosed, and
    thrust-faulted during the Hudsonian orogeny,
    which separates the Paleoproterozoic from the
    Mesoproterozoic.

13
Satellite image of Labrador Trough
14
Paleoproterozoic Ice Age
  • A Paleoproterozoic ice age is recorded in rocks
    north of Lake Huron
  • Evidence for glaciation includes finely laminated
    mudstones and tillites (or poorly sorted
    conglomerates of glacial debris).
  • fine laminations can indicate seasonal deposition

15
Aulacogens
  • Defined as the inactive rift (or failed rift arm)
    at a Y-shaped triple junction where three plates
    are separating.
  • Two of the three rifts are dominant and active,
    and the third is inactive--later it fills with
    sediment.

16
Y-shaped triple junction
17
The Mesoproterozoic Era
  • The Midcontinent Rift and the Keweenawan Sequence
  • Extending southward from the Lake Superior
    region, and overlying Animikian rocks or
    crystalline basement, the Keweenawan consists of
  • Clean quartz sandstones
  • Conglomerates
  • Basaltic lava flows
  • Native copper in rocks
  • An old rift zone 1.2 by - 1.0 by old.
  • Extends as far south as Kansas.

18
Precambrian provinces of North America. Note
Mid-Continent Rift and Grenville Province.
19
The Grenville Province and Rodinia
  • The Grenville Province in eastern North America
    consists of sedimentary rocks that were
    metamorphosed and intruded by igneous bodies.
  • Deformation of these rocks occurred during the
    Grenville orogeny, 1.2 by to 1.0 by ago.
  • This orogeny was associated with the formation of
    the supercontinent Rodinia (Proto-Pangea)
  • Ocean around Rodinia was called Mirovia

20
Figure 7-8 (p. 247) The Neoproterozoic
supercontinent Rodinia as it began to break
apart. (After Hoffman, P. F. 1991. Science 252
1409-1412.)
21
The Neoproterozoic
  • The Neoproterozoic ( "new" Proterozoic) ranges
    from about 1.0 by to 0.54 by (540 my).
  • Neoproterozoic rocks were deposited in basins and
    shelf areas surrounding the North American
    craton. Most of these rocks were deformed during
    the Paleozoic orogenies.

22
Glacial deposits in the Neoproterozoic -
Snowball Earth?
  • Tillites or lithified, unsorted conglomerates and
    boulder beds are found nearly worldwide (on all
    land masses except India and Siberia-Mongolia) at
    this time, and are interpreted by many geologists
    as glacial deposits.
  • Stratified cobbles and dropstones
  • Glacial deposits are so widespread at this time
    that geologists refer to it as "snowball Earth
    (Varangian glaciation)
  • HIGHLY debated

23
Precambrian rocks of the Grand Canyon
  • Vishnu Schist - the oldest unit. Complex unit of
    metasediments and gneisses, intruded by granites
    about 1.4 by to 1.3 by. Topped by an
    unconformity.
  • Grand Canyon Supergroup - a Neoproterozoic unit
    consisting mainly of sandstones, siltstones, and
    shales. Top of this unit is an unconformity
    overlain by Cambrian sedimentary rocks.

24
Vishnu Schist, Grand Canyon Supergroup, and other
rocks in the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River.
http//www.valdosta.edu/phy/hist_geo_lab/gp_AZ/gp_
column/gp_col.html
25
Late Proterozoic Fossil Record
  • Microfossils of the Gunflint Chert
  • First Precambrian fossils to be discovered were
    Proterozoic fossils in the Gunflint Chert, NW of
    Lake Superior. Fossils resemble living
    photosynthetic organisms and include
    Cyanobacteria
  • Probably photosynthetic - altered atmosphere.
  • Rock contains organic compounds that are
    regarded as the breakdown products of chlorophyll

26
Gunflint Microfossils
Photomicrograph of spheroidal and filamentous
microfossils from the Gunflint Chert of Ontario
Canada
27
Proterozoic Fossil Record
  • Eukaryotes (large cells with nuclei and
    organelles) appeared by Mesoproterozoic time.
    Appeared by 1.6 by to 1.4 by. Increased in
    abundance about 1.4 by ago.
  • Potential for sexual reproduction and increasing
    variation (evolution)

28
Acritarchs
  • Acritarchs are single-celled spherical,
    organic-walled microfossils.
  • Not known what sort of organism they were, but
    they may have been phytoplankton. First appeared
    1.6 by ago. Maximum diversity and abundance 850
    my ago. They declined steadily during the
    Neoproterozoic glaciation, and few remained by
    675 my ago. Useful for correlation in Proterozoic
    strata.

29
Origin of Eukaryotes
  • Eukaryotes are thought to have arisen from an
    originally endosymbiotic relationship between two
    or more prokaryotic cells.
  • Symbiosis - two or more organisms living
    together, where each organism usually derives
    some benefit froom the relationship.
  • Endosymbiosis - One organism lives inside the
    other, e. g. bacteria in stomachs of cattle.

30
Origin of Eukaryotes
  • Organelles (Mitochondria, plastids) were once
    free living bacteria, that entered or were
    engulfed by another prokaryote. Eventually,
    relationship became mutually beneficial.
  • E. g. host cell provided proto-mitochondrion
    (primitive oxidizing bacteria) with plenty of
    food, mitochondrion performed oxidation and
    released energy for a bacterium that previously
    could only ferment. Eventually proto-mitochondrion
    gives up trying to reproduce.
  • E.g. host cell waste products (carbon dioxide
    etc.) used by a cyanobacterium (proto-plastid) to
    photosynthesize. Plastid leaks energy to host
    cell. Eventually gives up reproducing on its own.

31
Neoproterozoic Metazoan Life
Doushantuo Formation Metazoans--Eggs Embryos
32
The Ediacaran Fauna
  • In 1947, an Australian geologist, R.C. Sprigg,
    discovered impressions of soft-bodied animals in
    the Pound Quartzite in the Ediacara Hills of
    South Australia

33
Ediacaran Fauna
  • The Ediacaran fauna of Australia
  • Tribrachidium heraldicum, a possible primitive
    echinoderm or cnidarian

Spriggina floundersi, a possible ancestor of
trilobites
34
Ediacaran Fauna
  • Pavancorina minchami
  • Restoration of the Ediacaran Environment

35
Represented Phyla
  • Three present-day phyla may be represented in the
    Ediacaran fauna
  • jellyfish and sea pens (phylum Cnidaria),
  • segmented worms (phylum Annelida),
  • and primitive members of the phylum Arthropoda
    (the phylum with insects, spiders crabs, and
    others)
  • One Ediacaran fossil, Spriggina, has been cited
    as a possible ancestor of trilobites
  • Another might be a primitive member of the phylum
    Echinodermata

36
Distinct Evolutionary Group
  • However, some scientists think
  • these Ediacaran animals represent
  • an early evolutionary group quite distinct from
  • the ancestry of todays invertebrate animals
  • Ediacara-type faunas are known
  • from all continents except Antarctica,
  • are collectively referred to as the Ediacaran
    fauna
  • were widespread between 545 and 670 million years
    ago
  • but their fossils are rare
  • Their scarcity should not be surprising, though,
  • because all lacked durable skeletons

37
Latest Proterozoic Kimberella
  • Kimberella, an advanced metazoan in the Ediacaran
    fauna, which is the first known organism to have
    a coelom or body cavity. Possibly mollusc-like.
    Specimens found in Russia in 1993. 550 my old.

38
Figure 7-32 (p. 261)Reconstruction of
Kimberella. (After Fedonkin, M. A., and
Waggoner, B. M. 1997. The Late Precambrian fossil
Kimbrella is a mollusk-like bilateral organism.
Nature 388(28) 868-871).
39
Soft Bodies
  • All known Proterozoic animals were soft-bodied,
    but there is some evidence that the earliest
    stages in the origin of skeletons was underway
  • Even some Ediacaran animals may have had a
    chitinous carapace and others appear to have had
    areas of calcium carbonate
  • The odd creature known as Kimberella from the
    latest Proterozoic of Russia had a tough outer
    covering similar to that of some present-day
    marine invertebrates

40
Small Shelly Fauna The Origin of Hard Parts
  • Small fossils with hard parts or shells (mostly a
    few mm long ) appeared in the Vendian
  • Cloudina, an organism with a small (few cm long),
    tubular shell of calcium carbonate is interpreted
    as a tube-dwelling worm. It is the earliest known
    organism with a CaCO3 shell.

41
Geologic time scale across the Precambrian-Cambria
n boundary, showing the Vendian, and indicating
the occurrence of the Ediacaran fauna, the small
shelly fauna (first known hard parts),
42
Figure 7-37 (p. 263) Correlation of major
events in the history of the biosphere,
lithosphere, and atmosphere.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com