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Rocks, Fossils and Time

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Title: Rocks, Fossils and Time


1
Chapter 5
Rocks, Fossils and TimeMaking Sense of the
Geologic Record
2
Geologic Record
  • The fact that Earth has changed through time
  • is apparent from evidence in the geologic record
  • The geologic record is the record
  • of events preserved in rocks
  • Although all rocks are useful
  • in deciphering the geologic record,
  • sedimentary rocks are especially useful
  • The geologic record is complex
  • and requires interpretation, which we will try to
    do
  • Uniformitarianism is useful for this activity

3
Geologic Record
  • for nearly 14 million years of Earth history
  • preserved at Sheep Rock
  • in John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, Oregon
  • Fossils in these rocks
  • provide a record
  • of climate change
  • and biological events

4
Stratigraphy
  • Stratigraphy deals with the study
  • of any layered (stratified) rock,
  • but primarily with sedimentary rocks and their
  • composition
  • origin
  • age relationships
  • geographic extent
  • Sedimentary rocks are almost all stratified
  • Many igneous rocks
  • such as a succession of lava flows or ash beds
  • are stratified and obey the principles of
    stratigraphy
  • Many metamorphic rocks are stratified

5
Stratified Igneous Rocks
  • Stratification in a succession of lava flows in
    Oregon.

6
Stratified Sedimentary Rocks
  • Stratification in sedimentary rocks consisting of
    alternating layers of sandstone and shale, in
    California.

7
Stratified Metamorphic Rocks
  • Stratification in Siamo Slate, in Michigan

8
Vertical Stratigraphic Relationships
  • Surfaces known as bedding planes
  • separate individual strata from one another
  • or the strata grade vertically
  • from one rock type to another
  • Rocks above and below a bedding plane differ
  • in composition, texture, color
  • or a combination of these features
  • The bedding plane signifies
  • a rapid change in sedimentation
  • or perhaps a period of nondeposition

9
Superposition
  • Nicolas Steno realized that he could determine
  • the relative ages of horizontal (undeformed)
    strata
  • by their position in a sequence
  • In deformed strata, the task is more difficult
  • but some sedimentary structures
  • such as cross-bedding
  • and some fossils
  • allow geologists to resolve these kinds of
    problems
  • we will discuss the use of sedimentary structures
  • more fully later in the term

10
Principle of Inclusions
  • According to the principle of inclusions,
  • which also helps to determine relative ages,
  • inclusions or fragments in a rock
  • are older than the
  • rock itself
  • Light-colored granite
  • in northern Wisconsin
  • showing basalt inclusions (dark)
  • Which rock is older?
  • Basalt, because the granite includes it

11
Age of Lava Flows, Sills
  • Determining the relative ages
  • of lava flows, sills and associated sedimentary
    rocks
  • uses alteration by heat
  • and inclusions
  • How can you determine
  • whether a layer of basalt within a sequence
  • of sedimentary rocks
  • is a buried lava flow or a sill?
  • A lava flow forms in sequence with the
    sedimentary layers.
  • Rocks below the lava will have signs of heating
    but not the rocks above.
  • The rocks above may have lava inclusions.

12
Sill
  • A sill will heat the rocks above and below.
  • The sill might also have inclusions of the rocks
    above and below,
  • but neither of these rocks will have inclusions
    of the sill.

13
Unconformities
  • So far we have discussed vertical relationships
  • among conformable strata,
  • which are sequences of rocks
  • in which deposition was more or less continuous
  • Unconformities in sequences of strata
  • represent times of nondeposition and/or erosion
  • that encompass long periods of geologic time,
  • perhaps millions or tens of millions of years
  • The rock record is incomplete.
  • The interval of time not represented by strata is
    a hiatus.

14
The origin of an unconformity
  • In the process of forming an unconformity,
  • deposition began 12 million years ago (MYA),
  • continuing until 4 MYA
  • For 1 million years erosion occurred
  • removing 2 MY of rocks
  • and giving rise to
  • a 3 million year hiatus
  • The last column
  • is the actual stratigraphic record
  • with an unconformity

15
Types of Unconformities
  • Three types of surfaces can be unconformities
  • A disconformity is a surface
  • separating younger from older rocks,
  • both of which are parallel to one another
  • A nonconformity is an erosional surface
  • cut into metamorphic or intrusive rocks
  • and covered by sedimentary rocks
  • An angular unconformity is an erosional surface
  • on tilted or folded strata
  • over which younger rocks were deposited

16
Types of Unconformities
  • Unconformities of regional extent
  • may change from one type to another
  • They may not represent the same amount
  • of geologic time everywhere

17
A Disconformity
  • A disconformity between sedimentary rocks
  • in California, with conglomerate deposited upon
  • an erosion surface in the underlying rocks

18
An Angular Unconformity
  • An angular unconformity in Colorado
  • between steeply dipping Pennsylvanian rocks
  • and overlying Cenozoic-aged conglomerate

19
A Nonconformity
  • A nonconformity in South Dakota separating
  • Precambrian metamorphic rocks from
  • the overlying Cambrian-aged Deadwood Formation

20
Lateral Relationships
  • In 1669, Nicolas Steno proposed
  • his principle of lateral continuity,
  • meaning that layers of sediment extend outward
  • in all directions until they terminate
  • Terminations may be abrupt
  • at the edge of a depositional basin
  • where eroded
  • where truncated by faults

21
Gradual Terminations
  • or they may be gradual
  • where a rock unit
  • becomes progressively thinner
  • until it pinches out
  • or where it splits into
  • thinner units
  • each of which pinches out,
  • called intertonging
  • where a rock unit changes
  • by lateral gradation
  • as its composition and/or texture
  • becomes increasingly different

22
Sedimentary Facies
  • Both intertonging and lateral gradation
  • indicate simultaneous deposition
  • in adjacent environments
  • A sedimentary facies is a body of sediment
  • with distinctive
  • physical, chemical and biological attributes
  • deposited side-by-side
  • with other sediments
  • in different environments

23
Sedimentary Facies
  • On a continental shelf, sand may accumulate
  • in the high-energy nearshore environment
  • while mud and carbonate deposition takes place
  • at the same time
  • in offshore low-energy environments

24
Marine Transgressions
  • A marine transgression
  • occurs when sea level rises
  • with respect to the land
  • During a marine transgression,
  • the shoreline migrates landward
  • the environments paralleling the shoreline
  • migrate landward as the sea progressively covers
  • more and more of a continent

25
Marine Transgressions
  • Each laterally adjacent depositional environment
  • produces a sedimentary facies
  • During a transgression,
  • the facies forming offshore
  • become superposed
  • upon facies deposited
  • in nearshore environments

26
Marine 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
27
A Marine Transgression in the Grand Canyon
  • Three formations deposited
  • in a widespread marine transgression
  • exposed in the walls of the Grand Canyon, Arizona

28
Marine Regression
  • During a marine regression,
  • sea level falls
  • with respect
  • to the continent
  • and the environments paralleling the shoreline
  • migrate seaward

29
Marine 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
30
Walthers Law
  • Johannes Walther (1860-1937) noticed that
  • the same facies he found laterally
  • were also present in a vertical sequence,
  • now called Walthers Law
  • which holds that
  • the facies seen in a conformable vertical
    sequence
  • will also replace one another laterally
  • Walthers law applies
  • to marine transgressions and regressions

31
Extent and Rates of Transgressions and
Regressions
  • Since the Late Precambrian,
  • 6 major marine transgressions followed
  • by regressions have occurred in North America
  • These produce rock sequences,
  • bounded by unconformities,
  • that provide the structure
  • for U.S. Paleozoic and Mesozoic geologic history
  • Shoreline movements
  • are a few centimeters per year
  • Transgression or regressions
  • with small reversals produce intertonging

32
Causes of Transgressions and Regressions
  • Uplift of continents causes regression
  • Subsidence causes transgression
  • Widespread glaciation causes regression
  • due to the amount of water frozen in glaciers
  • Rapid seafloor spreading,
  • expands the mid-ocean ridge system,
  • displacing seawater onto the continents
  • Diminishing seafloor-spreading rates
  • increases the volume of the ocean basins
  • and causes regression

33
Relative Ages between Separate Areas
  • Using relative dating techniques,
  • it is easy to determine
  • the relative ages of rocks
  • in Column A
  • and of rocks in Column B
  • However, one needs more information
  • to determine the ages of rocks
  • in one section relative to
  • those in the other

34
Relative Ages between Separate Areas
  • Rocks in A may be
  • younger than those in B,
  • the same age as in B
  • older than in B
  • Fossils could solve this problem

35
Fossils
  • Fossils are the remains or traces of prehistoric
    organisms
  • They are most common in sedimentary rocks
  • and in some accumulations
  • of pyroclastic materials, especially ash
  • They are extremely useful for determining
    relative ages of strata
  • but geologists also use them to ascertain
  • environments of deposition
  • Fossils provide some of the evidence for organic
    evolution
  • and many fossils are of organisms now extinct

36
How do Fossils Form?
  • Remains of organisms are called body fossils.
  • and consist mostly of durable skeletal elements
  • such as bones, teeth and shells
  • rarely we might find entire animals preserved by
    freezing or mummification

37
Body Fossil
  • Skeleton of a 2.3-m-long marine reptile
  • in the museum at Glacier Garden in Lucerne,
    Switzerland

38
Body Fossils
  • Shells of Mesozoic invertebrate animals
  • known as ammonoids and nautiloids
  • on a rock slab
  • in the Cornstock Rock Shop in Virginia City Nevada

39
Trace Fossils
  • Indications of organic activity
  • including tracks, trails, burrows, and nests
  • are called trace fossils
  • A coprolite is a type of trace fossil
  • consisting of fossilized feces
  • which may provide information about the size
  • and diet of the animal that produced it

40
Trace Fossils
  • Paleontologists think
  • that a land-dwelling beaver
  • called Paleocastor
  • made this spiral burrow in Nebraska

41
Trace Fossils
  • Fossilized feces (coprolite)
  • of a carnivorous mammal
  • Specimen measures about 5 cm long
  • and contains small fragments of bones

42
Body Fossil Formation
  • The most favorable conditions for preservation
  • of body fossils occurs when the organism
  • possesses a durable skeleton of some kind
  • and lives in an area where burial is likely
  • Body fossils may be preserved as
  • unaltered remains,
  • meaning they retain
  • their original composition and structure,
  • by freezing, mummification, in amber, in tar
  • or altered remains,
  • with some change in composition or structure
  • permineralized, recrystallized, replaced,
    carbonized

43
Unaltered Remains
  • Insects in amber
  • Preservation in tar

44
Unaltered Remains
  • 40,000-year-old frozen baby mammoth
  • found in Siberia in 1971
  • It is 1.15 m long and 1.0 m tall
  • and it had a hairy coat
  • Hair around the feet is still visible

45
Altered Remains
  • Petrified tree stump
  • in Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument,
    Colorado
  • Volcanic mudflows
  • 3 to 6 m deep
  • covered the lower parts
  • of many trees at this site

46
Altered Remains
  • Carbon film of a palm frond
  • Carbon film of an insect

47
Molds and Casts
  • Molds form
  • when buried remains leave a cavity
  • Casts form
  • if material fills in the cavity

48
Mold and Cast
Step a burial of a shell Step b dissolution
leaving a cavity, a mold Step c the mold is
filled by sediment forming a cast
49
Cast of a Turtle
  • Fossil turtle
  • showing some of the original shell material
  • body fossil
  • and a cast

50
Fossil Record
  • The fossil record is the record of ancient life
  • preserved as fossils in rocks
  • Just as the geologic record
  • must be analyzed and interpreted,
  • so too must the fossil record
  • The fossil record
  • is a repository of prehistoric organisms
  • that provides our only knowledge
  • of such extinct animals as trilobites and
    dinosaurs

51
Fossil Record
  • The fossil record is very incomplete because
  • bacterial decay,
  • physical processes,
  • scavenging,
  • and metamorphism
  • destroy organic remains
  • In spite of this, fossils are quite common

52
Fossils and Telling Time
  • William Smith
  • 1769-1839, an English civil engineer
  • independently discovered
  • Stenos principle of superposition
  • He also realized
  • that fossils in the rocks followed the same
    principle
  • He discovered that sequences of fossils,
  • especially groups of fossils
  • are consistent from area to area
  • Thereby discovering a method
  • of relatively dating sedimentary rocks at
    different locations

53
Fossils from Different Areas
  • To compare the ages of rocks from two different
    localities
  • Smith used fossils

54
Principle of Fossil Succession
  • Using superposition, Smith was able to predict
  • the order in which fossils
  • would appear in rocks
  • not previously visited
  • Alexander Brongniart in France
  • also recognized this relationship
  • Their observations
  • lead to the principle of fossil succession

55
Principle of Fossil Succession
  • Principle of fossil succession
  • holds that fossil assemblages (groups of fossils)
  • succeed one another through time
  • in a regular and determinable order
  • Why not simply match up similar rocks types?
  • Because the same kind of rock
  • has formed repeatedly through time
  • Fossils also formed through time,
  • but because different organisms
  • existed at different times,
  • fossil assemblages are unique

56
Distinct Aspect
  • An assemblage of fossils
  • has a distinctive aspect
  • compared with younger
  • or older fossil assemblages

57
Matching Rocks Using Fossils
  • Geologists use the principle of fossil succession
  • to match ages of distant rock sequences
  • Dashed lines indicate rocks with similar fossils
  • thus having the same age

58
Matching Rocks Using Fossils
youngest
oldest
  • The youngest rocks are in column B
  • whereas the oldest ones are in column C

59
Relative Geologic Time Scale
  • Investigations of rocks by naturalists between
    1830 and 1842
  • based on superposition and fossil succession
  • resulted in the recognition of rock bodies called
    systems
  • and the construction of a composite geologic
    column
  • that is the basis for the relative geologic time
    scale

60
Geologic Column and the Relative Geologic Time
Scale
Absolute ages (the numbers) were added much
later.
61
Example of the Development of Systems
  • Cambrian System
  • Sedgwick studied rocks in northern Wales
  • and described the Cambrian System
  • without paying much attention to the fossils
  • His system could not be recognized beyond the
    area
  • Silurian System
  • Murchinson described the Silurian System in South
    Wales
  • including carefully described fossils
  • His system could be identified elsewhere

62
Dispute of Systems
  • Ordovician System
  • Lapworth assigned the overlap
  • between the two to a new system,
  • the Ordovician

63
System Dispute
  • The dispute was settled in 1879
  • when Lapworth proposed the Ordovician

64
Stratigraphic Terminology
  • Because sedimentary rock units
  • are time transgressive,
  • they may belong to one system in one area
  • and to another system elsewhere
  • At some localities a rock unit
  • straddles the boundary between systems
  • We need terminology that deals with both
  • rocksdefined by their content
  • lithostratigraphic unit rock content
  • biostratigraphic unit fossil content
  • and timeexpressing or related to geologic time
  • time-stratigraphic unit rocks of a certain age
  • time units referring to time not rocks

65
Lithostratigraphic Units
  • Lithostratigraphic units are based on rock type
  • with no consideration of time of origin
  • The basic lithostratigraphic element is a
    formation
  • which is a mappable rock unit
  • with distinctive upper and lower boundaries
  • It may consist of a single rock type
  • such as the Redwall limestone
  • or a variety of rock types
  • such as the Morrison Formation
  • Formations may be subdivided
  • into members and beds
  • or collected into groups and supergroups

66
Lithostratigraphic Units
  • Lithostratigraphic units in Zion National Park,
    Utah
  • For example The Chinle Formation is divided into
  • Springdale Sandstone Member
  • Petrified Forest Member
  • Shinarump Conglomerate Member

67
Biostratigraphic Units
  • A body of strata recognized
  • only on the basis
  • of its fossil content
  • is a biostratigraphic unit
  • the boundaries of which do not necessarily
  • correspond to those of lithostratigraphic units
  • The fundamental biostratigraphic unit
  • is the biozone

68
Time-Stratigraphic Units
  • Time-stratigraphic units
  • also called chronostratigraphic units
  • consist of rocks deposited
  • during a particular interval
  • of geologic time
  • The basic time-stratigraphic unit
  • is the system

69
Time Units
  • Time units simply designate
  • certain parts of geologic time
  • Period is the most commonly used time designation
  • Two or more periods may be designated as an era
  • Two or more eras constitute and eon
  • Periods can be made up of shorter time units
  • epochs, which can be subdivided into ages
  • The time-stratigraphic unit, system,
  • corresponds to the time unit, period

70
Classification of Stratigraphic Units
  • Litho-stratigraphic Units
  • Supergroup
  • Group
  • Formation
  • Member
  • Bed
  • Time-stratigraphic Units
  • Eonothem
  • Erathem
  • System
  • Series
  • Stage
  • Time-Units
  • Eon
  • Era
  • Period
  • Epoch
  • Age

71
Correlation
  • Correlation is the process
  • of matching up rocks in different areas
  • There are two types of correlation
  • Lithostratigraphic correlation
  • simply matches up the same rock units
  • over a larger area with no regard for time
  • Time-stratigraphic correlation
  • demonstrates time-equivalence of events

72
Lithostratigraphic Correlation
  • Correlation of lithostratigraphic units such as
    formations
  • traces rocks laterally across gaps

73
Lithostratigraphic Correlation
  • We can correlate rock units based on
  • composition
  • position in a sequence
  • and the presence of distinctive key beds

74
Time Equivalence
  • Because most rock units of regional extent
  • are time transgressive
  • we cannot rely on lithostratigraphic correlation
  • to demonstrate time equivalence
  • Example
  • sandstone in Arizona is correctly correlated
  • with similar rocks in Colorado and South Dakota
  • but the age of these rocks varies from
  • Early Cambrian in the west
  • to middle Cambrian farther east

75
Time Equivalence
  • The most effective way
  • to demonstrate time equivalence
  • is time-stratigraphic correlation
  • using biozones
  • But other methods are useful

76
Biozones
  • For all organisms now extinct,
  • their existence marks two points in time
  • their time of origin
  • their time of extinction
  • One type of biozone, the range zone,
  • is defined by the geologic range
  • total time of existence
  • of a particular fossil group
  • a species, or a group of related species called a
    genus
  • Most useful are fossils that are
  • easily identified, geographically widespread
  • and had a rather short geologic range

77
Guide Fossils
  • The brachiopod Lingula
  • is not useful because,
  • although it is easily identified
  • and has a wide geographic extent,
  • it has too large a geologic range
  • The brachiopod Atrypa
  • and trilobite Paradoxides
  • are well suited
  • for time-stratigraphic correlation,
  • because of their short ranges
  • They are guide fossils

78
Concurrent Range Zones
  • A concurrent range zone is established
  • by plotting the overlapping ranges
  • of two or more fossils
  • with different geologic ranges
  • This is probably the most accurate method
  • of determining time equivalence

79
Short Duration Physical Events
  • Some physical events
  • of short duration are also used
  • to demonstrate time equivalence
  • distinctive lava flow
  • would have formed over a short period of time
  • ash falls
  • take place in a matter of hours or days
  • may cover large areas
  • are not restricted to a specific environment
  • Absolute ages may be obtained for igneous events
  • using radiometric dating

80
Absolute Dates and the Relative Geologic Time
Scale
  • Ordovician rocks
  • are younger than those of the Cambrian
  • and older than Silurian rocks
  • But how old are they?
  • When did the Ordovician begin and end?
  • Since radiometric dating techniques
  • work on igneous and some metamorphic rocks,
  • but not generally on sedimentary rocks,
  • this is not so easy to determine

81
Absolute Dates for Sedimentary Rocks Are Indirect
  • Mostly, absolute ages for sedimentary rocks
  • must be determined indirectly by
  • dating associated igneous and metamorphic rocks
  • According to the principle of cross-cutting
    relationships,
  • a dike must be younger than the rock it cuts,
  • so an absolute age for a dike
  • gives a minimum age for the host rock
  • and a maximum age for any rocks deposited
  • across the dike after it was eroded

82
Indirect Dating
  • Absolute ages of sedimentary rocks
  • are most often found
  • by determining radiometric ages
  • of associated igneous or metamorphic rocks

83
Indirect Dating
  • The absolute dates obtained
  • from regionally metamorphosed rocks
  • give a maximum age
  • for overlying sedimentary rocks
  • Lava flows and ash falls interbedded
  • with sedimentary rocks
  • are the most useful for determining absolute ages
  • Both provide time-equivalent surfaces
  • giving a maximum age for any rocks above
  • and a minimum age for any rocks below

84
Indirect Dating
  • Combining thousands of absolute ages
  • associated with sedimentary rocks
  • of known relative age
  • gives the numbers
  • on the geologic time scale

85
Summary
  • The first step in deciphering the geologic
    history of a region
  • is determining relative ages of the rocks
  • First ascertain the vertical relationships
  • among the rock layers
  • even if they have been complexly deformed
  • The geologic record
  • is an accurate chronicle of ancient events,
  • but it has many discontinuities or unconformities
  • representing times of nondeposition, erosion or
    both

86
Summary
  • Simultaneous deposition
  • in adjacent but different environments
  • yields sedimentary facies,
  • which are bodies of sediment or sedimentary rock
  • with distinctive lithologic and biologic
    attributes
  • According to Walthers law,
  • the facies in a conformable vertical sequence
  • replace one another laterally
  • During a marine transgression,
  • a vertical sequence of facies results
  • with offshore facies superposed over nearshore
    facies

87
Summary
  • During a marine regression,
  • a vertical sequence of facies results
  • with nearshore facies superposed
  • over offshore facies,
  • the opposite of transgression
  • Marine transgressions and regressions result
    from
  • uplift and subsidence of continents
  • the amount of water in glaciers
  • rate of seafloor spreading (volume of ridges)

88
Summary
  • Most fossils are found in sedimentary rocks
  • although they might also be in volcanic ash,
  • volcanic mudflows, but rarely in other rocks
  • Fossils are actually quite common,
  • but the fossil record is strongly biased
  • toward those organisms
  • that have durable skeletons
  • and that lived where burial was likely
  • Law of fossil succession (William Smith)
  • holds that fossil assemblages succeed one another
  • through time in a predictable order

89
Summary
  • Superposition and fossil succession
  • were used to piece together
  • a composite geologic column
  • which serves as a relative time scale
  • To bring order to stratigraphic terminology,
  • geologists recognize units based entirely on
    content
  • lithostratigraphic and biostratigraphic units
  • and those related to time
  • time-stratigraphic and time units
  • Lithostratigraphic correlation involves
  • demonstrating the original continuity
  • of a presently discontinuous rock unit over an
    area

90
Summary
  • Biostratigraphic correlation of range zones,
  • and especially concurrent range zones,
  • demonstrates that rocks in different areas
  • are of the same relative age,
  • even with different compositions
  • The best way to determine absolute ages
  • of sedimentary rocks and their contained fossils
  • is to obtain absolute ages
  • for associated igneous and metamorphic rocks
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