GeologicTimeStratigraphicCorrelation PDF
GeologicTimeStratigraphicCorrelation PDF
Correlation
Geology 200
Geology for Environmental Scientists
Relative Time
Geologists first worked out the sequence of
events recorded in the rock record using the
principles of relative time:
original horizontality
original
i i l lateral
l l continuity
i i
superposition
fossil succession
cross
cross-cutting
cutting and intrusive relationships
unconformities
Original Horizontality - Sediments usually form
flat lying deposits on the earths surface.
flat-lying surface
Original Horizontality - Sedimentary rocks
are horizontal because the original
sediments were horizontal.
horizontal
Original Lateral Continuity: a logical
extension of original horizontality.
horizontality Individual beds
are the same age along an outcrop.
Unconformities: They are
significant in that they are
indicators of missing time in the
rock record.
Layered (a)
sedimentary
rocks 8_9
Nonconformity
Metamorphic
rock
Igneous
i
intrusive
i rock
k (b)
Younger
sedimentary
rocks
Angular
unconformity
Older, folded
sedimentary
rocks
(c)
Disconformity
Brachiopod Trilobite
(290 million years old) (490 million years old)
James Hutton, 18th Century founder of Geology
Siccar Point, Scotland, where Hutton discovered
the meaning g of unconformities.
Siccar Point, Scotland, June 2004
Angular Unconformity in the Grand Canyon
bet een Proterozoic
between Protero oic and Cambrian Rocks.
Rocks
100s of million years (MY) are missing.
Nonconformity between metamorphic and
y rocks in the Grand Canyon
sedimentary y
Disconformity within Pennsylvanian age rocks, West
Virginia The disconformity shows an older
Virginia.
topography. Maybe only 1000s of years are missing
from the rock record.
record
Can you interpret the sequence of geologic events
using superposition, intrusive relationships, and
cross-cutting relationships?
a
What is the sequence of events?
100
clide
80
Perrcent Nuc
60 Parent
40 Daughter
20
0
0 2 4 6 8 10
Half Lives
On a log scale
scale, geometric depletion plots as a
straight line.
Decay of Parent Nuclide
100
Scale, Pe rcent
10
Parent
1
Log S
0 2 4 6 8 10
Half Lives
01
0.1
Radioactive decay for an isotope that has a decay
(2 0 10-22).
constant off 2% a year (2.0x10 ) Th
The half
h lf life
lif is
i
35 years.
Radioactive Decay, =0.02/yr
100
uclide
80
60
ercent Nu
Parent
40 Daughter
Pe
20
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
Years
Radioactive decay is the opposite of geometric
growth by compound interest. At 2% interest the
money doubles every 35 years.
500
400
Dollars
300
Money
200
100
0
0 20 40 60 80
Years
Half-Lives
Counting half-lives:
Half lives: 1 2 3
Half-lives: 4
Parent :1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, etc.
Daughter :1/2, 3/4, 7/8, 15/16, etc.
P:D Ratio: 1:1,
1:1 1:3,
1:3 1:7,
1:7 1:15
Measuring Half-Lives
Ratios of 1:3, 1:7, 1:15, etc. are for
whole half lives
lives, but any ratios can be
measured; e.g. 1:4.2, or 8.6:1
The Decay Constant,
The rate of decay is called the decay
constant It determines the half
constant. half-life
life of
a radioactive element.
The
h decay
d constant is
i unique
i for
f eachh
radioactive element.
Measured with a scintillometer.
The Decay Constant,
Some values of the decay constant:
C14: 1.21x10
1 21x10-44 atoms per year
U235: 9.72x10-10 atoms per year
K40: 5.34x10-10 atoms per year
Calculating a Radiometric Date
t = ln (P+D)/P
What is the half life of Carbon
Carbon-14?
14?
t = (ln ((1+1)/1))/1.21x10-4
t = (ln 2)/1.21x10-4
t = 5,728
5 728 years
Some Half Lives
Carbon-14: 5,728 years
Uranium 235: 713 MY
Uranium-235:
Potassium-40: 1.3 BY
Uranium-238: 4.5 BY
Rubidium 87: 48.8
Rubidium-87: 48 8 BY
Setting the Radiometric Clock
When an igneous melt crystallizes,
parent and daughter elements are
chemically separated into different
crystals.
crystals
Further radioactive decay keeps the
parent and daughter elements in the
y
same crystal.
Setting the Radiometric Clock
Individual crystals of the same mineral
are dated to give the age of
crystallization or cooling. Examples
include zircon,
zircon muscovite,
muscovite and biotite.
biotite
Note that whole rock analysis would
not give the age of cooling.
Setting the Radiometric Clock
Carbon-14 is different in that it occurs
in organic remains rather than in rocks.
Clock is set when an organism dies.
dies
Carbon-14 is absorbed by all living
organisms from the atmosphere or the
food
ood tthey
ey eat.
Useful for about 10 half lives, or only
about
b t 57,000
57 000 years.
Fig. 8.12. Carbon-14 radiometric clock
Charcoal, wood, twigs and seeds.
Bone.
Marine, estuarine and riverine shell.
Leather.
Peat
Coprolites.
Materials dated S il
Soil.
Pollen.
using the Carbon-14 Hair.
method
th d Pottery
Pottery.
Wall paintings and rock art works.
Avian eggshell.
Corals and foraminifera
foraminifera.
Speleothems.
Blood residues.
Textiles and fabrics.
Paper and parchment.
Fish remains.
Insect remains.
Resins and glues.
Antler and horn.
Water.
Calibrating the Geologic Time
Scale
Radiometric dates from igneous rocks
can be used to indirectly date
sedimentary rocks and their fossils.
Principles such as superposition and
cross-cutting relationships come into
play.
l
Thousands of radiometric dates have
been obtained.
8_21
Lava flow 1
200,000
80 MY yyears
old old
Layer ?
What we want
to date
Cretaceous
fossils
Lava
La a flo
flow 2
400,000 years old
90 MY old
Examples of
conodonts, the
teeth of primitive
chordates
The conodont animal from the
Mississippian
pp of Scotland
1 cm
Age of the Earth: 4.6 BY
Th
The oldest
ld rocks k found
f d on earthh are 4.0
4 0 BY
from NW Canada.
4.3 BY detrital zircons have been found in
younger sandstones in Australia.
Australia
Meteorites and moon rocks are 4.6 BY.
Rocks older than 4.0 BY on earth have
apparently
pp y been destroyed
y byy weatheringg
and plate tectonics.
4.40 BY zircon grain from Australia,
found in 3 BY sandstone
Stratigraphic Correlation
The Grand Canyon of the Colorado River
in Ari
Arizona
ona
Fig. 55.1.
Fig 1 Layered sedimentary rocks exposed in
the Grand Canyon, AZ
Stratigraphic
correlation
between Grand
Canyon, Zion,
andd Bryce
B
Canyon national
parks allows
construction of a
composite
p
stratigraphic
column.
Stratigraphic
correlation Grand Canyon,
Canyon Zion Canyon
Canyon, Bryce Canyon
between Grand
Canyon, Zion,
andd Bryce
B
Top of Navaho Ss.
Canyon national
parks allows
construction of a Top of Kaibab Ls.
composite
p
stratigraphic
column.
Zion Canyon National Park, Jurassic
Sedimentary Rocks
Jurassic Navaho Sandstone, Zion National
Park wind-blown cross-bedding
Park, cross-bedding.
Bryce Canyon, Utah, Cretaceous sedimentary rocks
Correlation
Determination of the equivalence of
bodies of rock at different locations.
Th are two
There t kinds
ki d off correlation:
l ti
Lithostratigraphic
g p - matchingg upp
continuous formations.
Chronostratigraphic - matching up
rocks of the same age. Usually done
with
ith fossils
f il using
i biostratigraphy.
bi t ti h
Correlation
Over short distances lithostratigraphic
correlation is the same as
chronostratigraphic
h t ti hi correlation.
l ti
Over medium distances theyy are not
the same.
Over long distances only
chronostratigraphic correlation can be
used.
d
Original Lateral Continuity: permits
lithostratigraphic correlation
Lithostratigraphic and
Chronostratigraphic
Relationships
l i hi
Sedimentary Facies
Modern Barrier Island
Time Lines
Parkman Ss
Cody Shale
Simple
g p
Lithostratigraphic
Correlation: Facies
Boundaries,, not
Time Lines
Grand Canyon
Stratigraphy
Cambrian strata of the Grand Canyon: Tapeats Ss., Bright Angel Sh.,
and Muav Ls. Note the two time lines from biostratigraphy.
Correlated Bed contacts
Detailed lithostratigraphic correlation of the Cambrian strata of the
Grand Canyon
Canyon. Note the facies interfingering
interfingering. (Stanley,
(Stanley Fig.
Fig 6.5)
6 5)
Interfingering of strata
due to shifting of facies
during deposition
Zone of middle
Cambrian trilobites
Zone of early
Cambrian trilobites
Cambrian strata of the Grand Canyon: Note the two time lines from
biostratigraphy.
Interfingering
te ge g ofo strata
st ata
due to shifting of facies
during deposition
1 4