Title: Chapter 10
1Chapter 10 Early Paleozoic Events
The beginning of the Phanerozoic - 542 million
years before present Paleozoic - Ancient
Life Mesozoic - Middle Life Cenozoic - Late
Life Rodina has broken up into Laurentia,
Baltica, Kazakhstania, Siberia, China, and
Gondwana
2Early Paleozoic Timeline
3Dance of the Continents
Laurentia - North America, and parts of
Greenland, northwestern Ireland and
Scotland. Baltica - Russia west of Urals and
most of northern Europe. Kazakhstania - region
between the Caspian Sea and China Siberia -
Russia east of Urals and north of Mongolia
4Dance of the Continents continues
China - China, Indochina and the Malay
Peninsula. Gondwana - South America, Africa,
India, Australia, and Antarctica
5Neoproterozoic Plates
Most continents in southern hemi-sphere. Africa
traverses South Pole.
6Some Regions Tranquil, Others Active
Many shallow, warm, well-lite seas allowed for
diversification of life. These are rare
today. Cambrian equator was N-S across North
America. Large-scale folding with development of
broad domes and basins. Also rare today.
7North America During the Cambrian
East
West
8North America Basins and Domes
9Michigan Basin and Cincinnati Arch
10Identifying the Base of the Cambrian
Used to be easy. First shell-bearing
multicellular organisms. Trilobites. Then older
fossils were found. Oh no! Now defined
as Trichophycus
11Trichophycus
12Early Paleozoic Events
We know little of the ancient ocean basins. They
are all subducted. Sedimentary rocks demonstrate
that oceans spilled out of their basins and
covered much of the continents.
Limestone. Advance and retreat of the oceans are
the most important part of the Paleozoic
landscape and evolution of life.
13Cratonic Sequences The Seas Come In, The Seas Go
Out
Four major marine transgressions and regressions
define the Paleozoic. Sauk - Neoproterozoic to
Lower Ordovician Tippecanoe - Middle Ordovician
to Upper Silurian Kaskaskia - Lower Devonian
to Upper Mississippian Absaroka - Lower
Pennsylvanian to Jurassic
14Cratonic Sequences of North America
15The Sauk and Tippecanoe Sequences
Beginning of Sauk Transgression Sedimentation
restricted to continental margins. Continen
tal interiors are above sealevel and eroding.
No living organisms on land. Erosion rate
difference? Begins with deposition of broad
beach sand deposits. Grand Canyon
16Grand Canyon Rocks
Tapeats Sandstone Bright Angel Shale? ?
17Grand Canyon Transgression
18The Second Transgression
Close of Sauk Transgression resulted in much land
above sea-level and eroding. Disconformity. Tippe
canoe Transgression Ordovician-Silurian Deposit
ion of beach sands St. Peter
Sandstone Ultra-mature quartz ss Glass
manufacturing Many rock cycles Eroded
Sauk rocks
19St. Peter Sandstone
Pacific, Missouri 99.44 quartz
20Evaporites Mark the Seas Last Stand
Michigan Basin Silurian in age Halite and
gypsum Salina Group Up to 750 m
thick! Barred basin restricts sea water
input Organic reefs Raised
sill Submerged bar
21Barred Basin Model
22Michigan Basin Salt Face
23Way Out West Events in the Cordillera
Cordillera (N.A.) Nearly parallel mountain
ranges that extend from the Rockies to the
California Coast Ranges. Passive margin during
Paleozoic with much sedimentation. Continents
edge near Owens Valley. Burgess
Shale Unusual organisms Discussed in next
chapter
24Unusual Organism
25Orogeny Begins Out West
Pacific Plate begins to collide with North
America plate. Graywakes and volcanic
rocks. Silica rich volcanic ash results in
cherts. North Sierra Nevada overturned thrust
belt
26Paleozoic Cordillera
Pacific Plate North America Plate
27Deposition In the Far North
Thick Silurian limestones indicate tropic
climate.
28Dynamic Events in the East
Passive plate margin with broad continental shelf
gives way to active subduction zone (with
volcanoes) during Middle Ordovician. The
Taconic Orogeny begins. Partial closure of the
Iapetus Ocean (precursor to Atlantic) Various
terranes are sutured onto eastern North America.
29Taconic Orogeny
30Caledonian Orogenic Belt
Caledonia is the ancient name for Scotland. Part
of the Appalachian-Caledonian system. Extends
from Stone Mountain in the south to Spitzbergen
in the north. Sheds vast quantities of sediment
to the west to form the Queenston Wedge.
31Aspects of Early Paleozoic Climate
During Early Paleozoic time, Earth had similar
climate to today. Differences Earth spins
faster and had shorter days. Tidal effects were
stronger. No vascular plants on land. Higher
albedo