Title: The Mesozoic Era
1The Mesozoic Era
2The Mesozoic (245 to 65 Mya)
- Beginning and ending with extinctions
- Spans Three Periods
- Triassic 245 to 208 m.y.
- Jurassic 208 to 188 m.y.
- Cretaceous 144 to 65 m.y.
- Supercontinent of Pangaea rifted apart over a
span of 150 million years.
3Global paleogeography near the end of the
Paleozoic Era
4Breakup of Pangaea four stages (three during
Mesozoic)
- Stage One Triassic
- Rifting and volcanism, normal faulting
- tensional stresses separated N. America from
Gondwanaland - similarly, Mexico from S. America
- similarly, eastern N. America from N. Africa
- Sea-floor generation during opening of oceans
(basaltic volcanism)
5Triassic Paleogeography
6Breakup of Pangaea (cont)
- Stage Two Triassic-Jurassic
- Rifting of narrow oceans between S. Africa and
Antarctica, Africa and India - Massive outpouring of basaltic lavas (7 million
km2)
7Jurassic Paleogeography
8Breakup of Pangaea (cont)
- Stage Three Jurassic-Cretaceous
- Atlantic Ocean rift extended northward
- Clockwise rotation of Eurasia
- Closing of eastern Tethys Sea (pre-Mediterranean)
- S. America-Africa split apart
- Australia-Antarctica remained intact
- Eastern N. America-Greenland remained intact
9Cretaceous Paleogeography
10Breakup of Pangaea (cont)
- Stage Four post-Mesozoic
- Complete N. America-Eurasian split
- Antarctica-Australia split
11Triassic and Jurassic (eastern and southern areas)
- Normal fault-bounded basins developed due to
rifting Nova Scotia to North Carolina - troughs filled with terrestrial sediments and
volcanics - Newark Group (Upper Triassic-Lower Jurassic)
- Palisades basalts of NJ and NY (190 m.y. ago)
12Figure 11-3 (p. 384) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Triassic of North
America.
13Palisades Sill
14Development of Gulf of Mexico
- occupied areas opening south of
Appalachian-Ouachita folded mountains - filled with Upper Triassic-Lower Jurassic salts
and evaporites (indicating aridity) over 1000 m
deposited origin of Gulf coast salt domes of
today
15Figure 11-7 (p. 387) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Jurassic of North
America.
16Early Mesozoic Evaporites
- Evaporites accumulated in shallow basins
- as Pangaea broke apart during the Early Mesozoic
- Water from the Tethys Sea flowed into the Central
Atlantic Ocean
17Early Mesozoic Evaporites
- Water from the Pacific Ocean flowed into the the
newly formed Gulf of Mexico
- Marine water from the south flowed into the area
that would eventually become the southern
Atlantic Ocean
18Cretaceous (eastern and southern areas)
- Flooding of coastal lowlands due to high sea
levels - a. Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains inundated as
they acted as subsiding shelves at this time - b. thick deposits of deltas, barrier islands,
shelves, reefs, etc.formed - c. Florida shallow submarine bank for limestones
- d. reefs made of rudistid bivalves rimmed Gulf
Coastal area duringthe Early Cretaceous - e. extensive chalk deposits of Cretaceous sea due
to massive production of microscopic calcareous
plankton (coccoliths) creta chalk - Rifting and ocean opening on eastern side led to
closure and compression on the western side of
continent subduction resulted.
19Figure 11-12 (p. 392) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Cretaceous of North
America.
20Triassic--Western North America
- Steeply dipping subduction zone
- Volcanic arcs and micro-continents carried to
western margin (displaced or allochthonous
terranesas many as 50 now known) - Massive accretion by subduction (including
volcanism), and tectonic accretion of displaced
terranes - Tectonic collage of displaced terrains may be 70
of total western Cordilleran termed accretionary
tectonics
21Map of the larger allochthonous (accreted)
terranes of western North America. The rocks in
these terranes contain rocks of Paleozoic age, or
older. The pink areas may be displaced areas of
the North American continent, but the green areas
probably originated as parts of other continents.
22Triassic--Western North America
- Sonoma Orogeny Permian-Triassic, Nevada
- island arc collided with west coast
- then a west-dipping subduction zone
- added 300 km new area to west
23Jurassic-Early Tertiary-Western N. America
- Nevadan Orogeny
- Formation of convergent mélange deposits
- Great volumes of granodiorite intruded Sierra
Nevada, Idaho, and Coast Range batholiths - Sevier Orogeny
- basement-involved tectonics multiple imbricated
thrust faults (low-angle décollement structures) - mainly seen in NV and UT, also in MT, BC, Alberta
- most famous thrust fault Lewis Thrust (65 km
displacement) - Laramide Oroeny
- Deformation more easterly
- Created original Rocky Mountain Landscape
- New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming Mountain
24Figure 11-22 (p. 396) Mesozoic batholiths in
west-central North America.
25Jurassic Sedimentation
- Navajo Sandstone (Lower Jurassic, MT, WY, NV,
Alberta) clean recycled eolian sands deposited
in coastal dune and shoreline environments - Sundance Formation (Middle) Jurassic, famous for
fossil reptiles) deposits of the Sundance Sea - Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic, famous for
dinosaurs) swampy plain deposits formed as
Sundance Sea regressed upon rising of Cordilleran
highlands to the west
26Figure 11-26 (p. 398) Paleogeographic map for
the early Jurassic of the western United States,
showing general extent of sea and land as well as
paleolatitudes. (From Stanley et al. 1971. Bull.
Am. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. 55(1) 13.)
27Figure 11-27 (p. 398) Region in the western
North America inundated by the Middle Jurassic
Sundance Sea. (Land areas are shown in tan,
marine areas in blue.)
28Cretaceous Sedimentation
- Early Cretaceous Seaway marine intrusions
leaving deposits south from Arctic Ocean and
north from Gulf of Mexico, dry land between two
seaways (UT and CO), seas withdrew during Middle
Cretaceous regression - Late Cretaceous Seaway greatest of marine
intrusions (transgressions) connected Gulf of
Mexico and Arctic Ocean via epicontinental seaway
(Western Interior Seaway) flooded area
foreland basin