Canadian Epoch

Canadian Epoch

The Canadian is the Lower or Early Ordovician in North America. The term is common in the older literature and has been well understood for more than a century. However is has no official recognition by the ICS* and has been superseded by the more recently defined Ibexian series of western Utah.

*(International Commission on Stratigraphy)

Background

Dana introduced the Canadian as the name for a system separated from the rest of the Ordovican (Weller 1980), then known as the Lower Silurian and referred to the rest of the Lower Silurian as the Trenton System. At that time the Ordovician had not yet been recognized.Later Ulrich redefined the Canadian as roughly equivalent to the Beekmantown strata of the Lower Ordovician.

Flower (1957 p.17) felt that recognition of the Canadian as a separate system would greatly solve problems in Early Paleozoic stratigraphy. As such faunas in limestones of Canadian age are uniformely wide spread and set off sharply from black shale graphtolite facies (Flower 1957) whereas those in the remaining Ordovician are more local in nature and the two facies are more integrated.

In common practice (e.g. MLK 1952, Weller 1960) the Canadian has been viewed as the Early, or Lower Ordovician. Flower however(1957, 1964) separated the Canadian from rest of the Ordovician and defined it as a four part system, divided in ascending order into the Gasconadian, Demingian, Jeffersonian, and Cassinian which stands today. The remaining Ordovician was also divided (Flower 1964, fig 3 p. 23) into four parts, the Whiterockian, Chazyan, Mohawkian, and Cincinnatian

Divisions, Stages

Starting at the botton:

*The Gasconadian, named for the Gasconade Formation in the Ozarks in Missouri is the Lower Canadain. The base of the Gasconade is a dolomitic sand, the Gunter Sandstone which is deposited on an erosional surface on the underlying Cambrian. The North American Gasconadian and the Tremedocian of the standard section are equivalent.

*The Demingian , named for the town of Deming in southern New Mexico which lies near localities where outcrops of this age are found is Middle Canadian and roughly equivalent to the lower Arenigian.

*The Jeffersonian which is the early Upper Canadian is based on the dolomitic Jefferson City Formation of Missouri,roughly the middle Arenigian

*The Cassinian , named for the Fort Cassin limestone of western Vermont, named for Fort Cassin which stood on the shore of Lake Champlain,is late) Upper Canadian, equivalent in part to the upper Arenigian

The El Paso Group

All four stages of the Canadian, except for the uppermost Cassinian, are represented in the El Paso Group in New Mexico and West Texas. The name comes from the City of El Paso, Texas, which is next to the Franklin Mountains were the type section is found.

Ibexian Correlation

The Ibexian and Canadian correlate imprecisely. Their upper boundaries are equivalent, found at the base of the Whiterock stage and the base of the Middle Ordovician. The Ibexian however extends below the Ordovician into the Upper Cambrain as each is defined. On the other hand the Canadian and Lower (Early) Ordovician are entirely equivalent.

References

*Flower, R.H. 1957; Flower, R.H. 1957, Studies of the Actinoceratida; Mem 2, New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, Socorro, NM
*Flower, R.H. 1964;The Nautiloid Order Ellesmeroceratida (Cephalopoda);Memoir 12; New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, Socorro, NM
*Moore Lalicker,and Fischer, 1952; Interbebrate Paleontology; McGraw-HIll;New York, Toronto, London.
*Weller,J.M 1960, Stratigraphic Principles and Practice, Harper's Geoscience Series, Harper and Brothers, New York.

(Geowhen: http://www.stratigraphy.org/geowhen/timelinestages.html )


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Canadian Shield — The Canadian Shield mdash; also called the Laurentian Plateau, or Bouclier Canadien (French) mdash; is a large geological shield covered by a thin layer of soil that forms the nucleus of the North American or Laurentia craton. It has a deep,… …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian Shield — Geol. the extensive region making up much of northern and central Canada underlain by Precambrian rocks that have been eroded to produce a low shieldlike profile. [1920 25] * * * One of the world s largest geologic continental shields, centred on …   Universalium

  • The Epoch Times — Type International newspaper Format Broadsheet Founded 2000 Political alignment …   Wikipedia

  • Pleistocene Epoch — Earlier and longer of the two epochs that constitute the Quaternary Period. The Pleistocene began с 1.8 million years ago and ended с 10,000 years ago. It was preceded by the Pliocene Epoch of the Tertiary Period and followed by the Holocene… …   Universalium

  • Holocene Epoch — formerly Recent Epoch Latest interval of the Earth s geologic history, dating from 10,000 years ago to the present. The younger of the two epochs that constitute the Quaternary Period, the Holocene follows the last glacial stage of the… …   Universalium

  • Chinese Canadian — Chinese Canadians …   Wikipedia

  • Chazy epoch — Cha*zy ep och (Geol.) An epoch at the close of the Canadian period of the American Lower Silurian system; so named from a township in Clinton Co., New York. See the Diagram under {Geology}. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Gasconadian Stage — The Gasconadian Stage is the first stage of the Ordovician geologic period in North America and of the Lower Ordovician Canadian Epoch, coming immediately after the Late Cambrian Trempealeauan and preceding the middle Canadian Demingian. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Hypsibema missouriensis — Temporal range: Campanian …   Wikipedia

  • Daly, Reginald Aldworth — ▪ Canadian American geologist born May 19, 1871, Napanee, Ont., Can. died Sept. 19, 1957, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.       Canadian American geologist who independently developed the theory of magmatic stoping, whereby molten magma rises through the… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”