Geologic time scale

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Image:Geologica time USGS.png
Diagram of geological time scale.

The geological time scale is used by geologists and other scientists to describe the timing and relationships between events that have occurred during the history of Earth. The table of geologic periods presented here agrees with the dates and nomenclature proposed by the International Commission on Stratigraphy, and uses the standard color codes of the United States Geological Survey.

Evidence from radiometric dating indicates that the Earth is about 4.570 billion years old. The geological or deep time of Earth's past has been organized into various units according to events which took place in each period. Different spans of time on the time scale are usually delimited by major geological or paleontological events, such as mass extinctions. For example, the boundary between the Cretaceous period and the Paleogene period is defined by the extinction event, known as the Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event, that marked the demise of the dinosaurs and of many marine species. Older periods which predate the reliable fossil record are defined by absolute age.

Contents

[edit] Graphical timelines

The second and third timelines are each subsections of their preceding timeline as indicated by asterisks.

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 id:paleogene value:rgb(1,0.7019,0)
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 id:jurassic      value:rgb(0.302,0.706,0.5) 
 id:triassic    value:rgb(0.403,0.765,0.716) 
 id:permian   value:rgb(0.404,0.776,0.867) 
 id:carboniferous     value:rgb(0.6,0.741,0.855)
 id:devonian  value:rgb(0.6,0.6,0.788)
 id:silurian  value:rgb(0.694,0.447,0.714)
 id:ordovician      value:rgb(0.976,0.506,0.651)
 id:cambrian  value:rgb(0.984,0.5,0.373)
 id:neoproterozoic    value:rgb(0.792,0.647,0.583)
 id:mesoproterozoic    value:rgb(0.867,0.761,0.533)
 id:paleoproterozoic    value:rgb(0.702,0.698,0.369)
 id:eoarchean    value:rgb(0.5,0.565,0.565)   
 id:paleoarchean    value:rgb(0.6,0.592,0.569)   
 id:mesoarchean    value:rgb(0.698,0.65,0.6)   
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 id:ediacaran     value:rgb(0.918,0.847,0.737)   
 id:cryogenian    value:rgb(0.863,0.671,0.667)
 id:tonian        value:rgb(0.796,0.643,0.424)  
 id:stratherian   value:rgb(1,1,0.8)   # light yellow
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 id:archean   value:rgb(0.6,0.6784,0.6745)
 id:hadean value:rgb(0.4,0.4,0.4)
 id:precambrian value:rgb(0.9,0.9,0.9)
 id:black  value:black
 id:white  value:white

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 bar:supereon
 from: start till: -542 text:Precambrian color:precambrian


 bar:eon
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 at:   -542   align:left   $markred shift:(2,3)
 from: -542   till:    0   text:Phanerozoic  color:phanerozoic   
 from:-2500   till: -542   text:Proterozoic  color:proterozoic   
 from:-3800   till: -2500  text:Archean      color:archean   
 from: start  till: -3800  text:Hadean       color:hadean


 bar:era
 from:  -65.5 till:    0   text:C~z shift:(0,1.5)        color:cenozoic        
 from: -251   till:  -65.5 text:Meso~zoic shift:(0,1.5)  color:mesozoic        
 from: -542   till: -251 text:Paleo~zoic shift:(0,1.5)  color:paleozoic 
 from: -1000  till:  -542  text:Neoprote-~rozoic shift:(0,1.8) color:neoproterozoic   
 from:-1600   till:  -1000  text:Mesoproterozoic color:mesoproterozoic  
 from:-2500   till: -1600  text:Paleoproterozoic color:paleoproterozoic 
 from:-2800   till: -2500  text:Neo-~archean shift:(0,1.5)     color:neoarchean       
 from:-3200   till: -2800  text:Meso-~archean shift:(0,1.5)   color:mesoarchean      
 from:-3600   till: -3200  text:Paleo-~archean shift:(0,1.5) color:paleoarchean     
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 from:start   till: -3800  color:white
 bar:period
 fontsize:6
 from:   -23.03 till:    0    color:neogene
 from:  -65.5 till:   -23.03  color:paleogene
 from: -145.5   till:  -65.5  color:cretaceous
 from: -199.6   till: -145.5  color:jurassic
 from: -251   till: -199.6    color:triassic
 from: -299   till: -251      color:permian
 from: -359.2   till: -299    color:carboniferous
 from: -416 till: -359.2      color:devonian
 from: -443.7 till: -416      color:silurian
 from: -488.3   till: -443.7  color:ordovician
 from: -542   till: -488.3    color:cambrian
 from: -630   till:  -542  text:Ed. color:ediacaran
 from: -850   till:  -630  text:Cryo-~genian color:cryogenian shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -1000  till:  -850  text:Ton-~ian color:tonian shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -1200  till:  -1000 text:Ste-~nian color:mesoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -1400  till:  -1200 text:Ect-~asian color:mesoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -1600  till:  -1400 text:Calym-~mian color:mesoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -1800  till:  -1600 text:Stath-~erian color:paleoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -2050  till:  -1800 text:Oro-~sirian color:paleoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -2300  till:  -2050 text:Rhy-~acian color:paleoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: -2500  till:  -2300 text:Sid-~erian color:paleoproterozoic shift:(0,0.5)
 from: start  till:  -2500 color:white

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 id:paleogene value:rgb(1,0.7019,0)
 id:cretaceous   value:rgb(0.5,0.764,0.1098)
 id:jurassic      value:rgb(0.302,0.706,0.5) 
 id:triassic    value:rgb(0.403,0.765,0.716) 
 id:permian   value:rgb(0.404,0.776,0.867) 
 id:carboniferous     value:rgb(0.6,0.741,0.855)
 id:devonian  value:rgb(0.6,0.6,0.788)
 id:silurian  value:rgb(0.694,0.447,0.714)
 id:ordovician      value:rgb(0.976,0.506,0.651)
 id:cambrian  value:rgb(0.984,0.5,0.373)
 id:cenozoic   value:rgb(1,1,0)
 id:mesozoic   value:rgb(0.5,0.6784,0.3176)
 id:paleozoic  value:rgb(0.5,0.7098,0.835)
 id:phanerozoic value:rgb(0.7019,0.886,0.819)
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 at:      0   align:right  $markred 
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 from: -542   till: -251   text:Paleozoic color:paleozoic
 bar:period fontsize:8
 from: -2.588  till: 0 color:quaternary
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 from: -145.5   till:  -65.5 text:Cretaceous color:cretaceous
 from: -199.6   till: -145.5   text:Jurassic color:jurassic
 from: -251.4   till: -199.6   text:Triassic   color:triassic
 from: -299   till: -251.4   text:Permian      color:permian
 from: -359.2   till: -299   text:Carboniferous color:carboniferous
 from: -416 till: -359.2   text:Devonian        color:devonian
 from: -443.7 till: -416 text:Sil-~urian shift:(0,0.5) color:silurian
 from: -488.3   till: -443.7 text:Ordovician color:ordovician
 from: -542   till: -488.3   text:Cambrian   color:cambrian

</timeline>

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 id:neogene   value:rgb(0.99215,0.8,0.54)
 id:paleogene value:rgb(1,0.7019,0)
 id:cenozoic   value:rgb(1,1,0)
 id:holocene   value:rgb(1,1,0.702)
 id:pleistocene  value:rgb(1,0.922,0.384)
 id:pliocene     value:rgb(1,0.922,0.675)
 id:miocene      value:rgb(1,0.871,0)
 id:oligocene    value:rgb(0.918,0.776,0.447)
 id:eocene       value:rgb(0.918,0.678,0.263)
 id:paleocene    value:rgb(0.92,0.576,0.005)
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 bar:period
 from: -2.588 till: 0   text:Q. color:quaternary
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 from:start  till: -23.03   text:Paleogene color:paleogene
 bar:epoch
 from: -0.1  till:  0  color:holocene
 from: -1.80  till: -0.1  text:P color:pleistocene
 from: -5.332    till: -1.80  text:Plio-~cene shift:(0,1) color:pliocene fontsize:7
 from:-23.03    till: -5.332    text:Miocene color:miocene
 from:-33.9    till:-23.03    text:Oligocene color:oligocene
 from:-55.8    till:-33.9    text:Eocene     color:eocene
 from:start  till:-55.8    text:Paleocene    color:paleocene

</timeline>

Millions of Years


The Holocene (the latest epoch) is too small to be shown clearly on this timeline.

[edit] Terminology

The largest defined unit of time is the supereon composed of Eons. Eons are divided into Eras, which are in turn divided into Periods, Epochs and Stages. At the same time paleontologists define a system of faunal stages, of varying lengths, based on changes in the observed fossil assemblages. In many cases, such faunal stages have been adopted in building the geological nomenclature, though in general there are far more recognized faunal stages than defined geological time units.

Geologists tend to talk in terms of Upper/Late, Lower/Early and Middle parts of periods and other units , such as "Upper Jurassic", and "Middle Cambrian". Upper, Middle, and Lower are terms applied to the rocks themselves, as in "Upper Jurassic sandstone," while Late, Middle, and Early are applied to time, as in "Early Jurassic deposition" or "fossils of Early Jurassic age." The adjectives are capitalized when the subdivision is formally recognized, and lower case when not; thus "early Miocene" but "Early Jurassic." Because geologic units occurring at the same time but from different parts of the world can often look different and contain different fossils, there are many examples where the same period was historically given different names in different locales. For example, in North America the Lower Cambrian is referred to as the Waucoban series that is then subdivided into zones based on trilobites. The same timespan is split into Tommotian, Atdabanian and Botomian stages in East Asia and Siberia. A key aspect of the work of the International Commission on Stratigraphy is to reconcile this conflicting terminology and define universal horizons that can be used around the world.

[edit] History of the time scale

Main article: history of geology
Image:Earth Clock ENG.svg
Earth history mapped to 24 hours

The principles underlying geologic (geological) time scales were laid down by Nicholas Steno in the late 17th century. Steno argued that rock layers (or strata) are laid down in succession, and that each represents a "slice" of time. He also formulated the principle of superposition, which states that any given stratum is probably older than those above it and younger than those below it. While Steno's principles were simple, applying them to real rocks proved complex. Over the course of the 18th century geologists realized that:

  1. Sequences of strata were often eroded, distorted, tilted, or even inverted after deposition;
  2. Strata laid down at the same time in different areas could have entirely different appearances;
  3. The strata of any given area represented only part of the Earth's long history.

The first serious attempts to formulate a geological time scale that could be applied anywhere on Earth took place in the late 18th century. The most influential of those early attempts (championed by Abraham Werner, among others) divided the rocks of the Earth's crust into four types: Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary. Each type of rock, according to the theory, formed during a specific period in Earth history. It was thus possible to speak of a "Tertiary Period" as well as of "Tertiary Rocks." Indeed, "Tertiary" (now Paleocene-Pliocene) and "Quaternary" (now Pleistocene-Holocene) remained in use as names of geological periods well into the 20th century.

In opposition to the then-popular Neptunist theories expounded by Werner (that all rocks had precipitated out of a single enormous flood), a major shift in thinking came with the reading by James Hutton of his Theory of the Earth; or, an Investigation of the Laws Observable in the Composition, Dissolution, and Restoration of Land Upon the Globe before the Royal Society of Edinburgh in March and April 1785, events which "as things appear from the perspective of the twentieth century, James Hutton in those reading became the founder of modern geology"[1] What Hutton proposed was that the interior of the Earth was hot, and that this heat was the engine which drove the creation of new rock: land was eroded by air and water and deposited as layers in the sea; heat then consolidated the sediment into stone, and uplifted it into new lands. This theory was dubbed "Plutonist" in contrast to the flood-oriented theory.

The identification of strata by the fossils they contained, pioneered by William Smith, Georges Cuvier, Jean d'Omalius d'Halloy and Alexandre Brogniart in the early 19th century, enabled geologists to divide Earth history more precisely. It also enabled them to correlate strata across national (or even continental) boundaries. If two strata (however distant in space or different in composition) contained the same fossils, chances were good that they had been laid down at the same time. Detailed studies between 1820 and 1850 of the strata and fossils of Europe produced the sequence of geological periods still used today.

The process was dominated by British geologists, and the names of the periods reflect that dominance. The "Cambrian," (the Roman name for Wales) and the "Ordovician," and "Silurian", named after ancient Welsh tribes, were periods defined using stratigraphic sequences from Wales.[2] The "Devonian" was named for the English county of Devon, and the name "Carboniferous" was simply an adaptation of "the Coal Measures," the old British geologists' term for the same set of strata. The "Permian" was named after Perm, Russia, because it was defined using strata in that region by a Scottish geologist Roderick Murchison. However, some periods were defined by geologists from other countries. The "Triassic" was named in 1834 by a German geologist Friedrich Von Alberti from the three distinct layers (Latin trias meaning triad) —red beds, capped by chalk, followed by black shales— that are found throughout Germany and Northwest Europe, called the 'Trias'. The "Jurassic" was named by a French geologist Alexandre Brogniart for the extensive marine limestone exposures of the Jura Mountains. The "Cretaceous" (from Latin creta meaning 'chalk') as a separate period was first defined by a Belgian geologist Jean d'Omalius d'Halloy in 1822, using strata in the Paris basin[3] and named for the extensive beds of chalk (calcium carbonate deposited by the shells of marine invertebrates).

British geologists were also responsible for the grouping of periods into Eras and the subdivision of the Tertiary and Quaternary periods into epochs.

When William Smith and Sir Charles Lyell first recognized that rock strata represented successive time periods, time scales could be estimated only very imprecisely since various kinds of rates of change used in estimation were highly variable. While creationists had been proposing dates of around six or seven thousand years for the age of the Earth based on the Bible, early geologists were suggesting millions of years for geologic periods with some even suggesting a virtually infinite age for the Earth. Geologists and paleontologists constructed the geologic table based on the relative positions of different strata and fossils, and estimated the time scales based on studying rates of various kinds of weathering, erosion, sedimentation, and lithification. Until the discovery of radioactivity in 1896 and the development of its geological applications through radiometric dating during the first half of the 20th century (pioneered by such geologists as Arthur Holmes) which allowed for more precise absolute dating of rocks, the ages of various rock strata and the age of the Earth were the subject of considerable debate.

In 1977, the Global Commission on Stratigraphy (now the International Commission on Stratigraphy) started an effort to define global references (Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points) for geologic periods and faunal stages. The commission's most recent work is described in the 2004 geologic time scale of Gradstein et al.[4]. A UML model for how the timescale is structured, relating it to the GSSP, is also available[5].

[edit] Table of geologic time

The following table summarizes the major events and characteristics of the periods of time making up the geologic time scale. As above, this time scale is based on the International Commission on Stratigraphy. (See lunar geologic timescale for a discussion of the geologic subdivisions of Earth's moon.) The height of each table entry does not correspond to the duration of each subdivision of time.


[edit] References and footnotes

  1. ^ John McPhee, Basin and Range, New York:Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1981, pp.95-100.
  2. ^ John McPhee, Basin and Range, pp.113-114.
  3. ^ (1974) Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd ed. (in Russian), Moscow: Sovetskaya Enciklopediya, vol. 16, p. 50. 
  4. ^ Felix M. Gradstein, James G. Ogg, Alan G. Smith (Editors); A Geologic Time Scale 2004, Cambridge University Press, 2005, (ISBN 0-521-78673-8)
  5. ^ Cox & Richard, A formal model for the geologic time scale and global stratotype section and point, compatible with geospatial information transfer standards, Geosphere, volume 1, pp 119-137, Geological Society of America, 2005
  6. ^ Paleontologists often refer to faunal stages rather than geologic (geological) periods. The stage nomenclature is quite complex. See The Paleobiology Database. Retrieved on 2006-03-19. for an excellent time ordered list of faunal stages.
  7. ^ Dates are slightly uncertain with differences of a few percent between various sources being common. This is largely due to uncertainties in radiometric dating and the problem that deposits suitable for radiometric dating seldom occur exactly at the places in the geologic column where they would be most useful. The dates and errors quoted above are according to the International Commission on Stratigraphy 2004 time scale. Dates labeled with a * indicate boundaries where a Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point has been internationally agreed upon: see List of Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points for a complete list.
  8. ^ a b Historically, the Cenozoic has been divided up into the Quaternary and Tertiary sub-eras, as well as the Neogene and Paleogene periods. However, the International Commission on Stratigraphy has recently decided to stop endorsing the terms Quaternary and Tertiary as part of the formal nomenclature.
  9. ^ The start time for the Holocene epoch is here given as 11,430 years ago ± 130 years (that is, between 9610 BC-9560 BC and 9350 BC-9300 BC). For further discussion of the dating of this epoch, see Holocene.
  10. ^ a b In North America, the Carboniferous is subdivided into Mississippian and Pennsylvanian Periods.
  11. ^ a b c d the Precambrian is also known as Cryptozoic.
  12. ^ a b c d e f The Proterozoic, Archean and Hadean are often collectively referred to as the Precambrian Time or sometimes, also the Cryptozoic.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Defined by absolute age (Global Standard Stratigraphic Age).
  14. ^ a b Though commonly used, the Hadean is not a formal eon and no lower bound for the Eoarchean has been agreed upon. The Hadean has also sometimes been called the Priscoan or the Azoic.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


ar:مقياس زمني جيولوجي ast:Escala de los tiempos xeolóxicos ca:Taula dels temps geològics cs:Geologický čas da:Jordens historie de:Geologische Zeitskala et:Geokronoloogiline skaala el:Γεωλογική χρονολογική κλίμακα es:Geología histórica eo:Geologia temposkalo eu:Garai geologiko fr:Échelle des temps géologiques ko:지질 시대 id:Skala waktu geologi is:Jarðsögulegur mælikvarði it:Scala dei tempi geologici he:לוח הזמנים הגאולוגי kk:Геохронология шәкілі la:Aevum geologicum lb:Geologesch Zäitskala lt:Geologinė laiko skalė hu:Földtörténeti korok nl:Geologisch tijdperk ja:地質時代 no:Jordens tidsaldre nn:Geologisk tidsskala pl:Tabela stratygraficzna pt:Escala de tempo geológico ru:Геохронологическая шкала sk:Chronostratigrafická tabuľka sl:Geološka časovna lestvica sr:Геолошка доба fi:Geologinen ajanlasku sv:Geologisk tidsskala th:ธรณีกาล vi:Niên đại địa chất tr:Jeolojik devirler uk:Геохронологічна шкала zh:地质时代表

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