Geologic Period
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A Geologic Period is a geologic time that represents a major subdivision of earth history (used to categorize and study geologic events and rock formations).
- AKA: Period (Geology), Geological Period.
- Context:
- It can (typically) function as a Time Classification through geologic time scale.
- It can (typically) serve as a Stratigraphic Unit through rock layer analysis.
- It can (typically) provide Chronological Reference for geologic events and fossil records.
- It can (typically) facilitate Cross-Regional Correlation through rock formation matching.
- It can often contain multiple geologic epochs as time subdivisions.
- It can often preserve distinct fossil assemblages from specific time intervals.
- It can often reflect major environmental conditions of its time span.
- It can often show evidence of significant evolutionary developments.
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- It can range from being a Short Duration Period to being a Long Duration Period, depending on its time span.
- It can range from being a Simple Stratigraphy Period to being a Complex Stratigraphy Period, depending on its rock record complexity.
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- It can support geologic dating through stratigraphic correlation.
- It can enable paleontological research through fossil preservation.
- It can guide resource exploration through rock formation understanding.
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- Examples:
- Phanerozoic Geologic Periods, such as:
- Cenozoic Era Periods:
- Quaternary Period with recent life forms.
- Neogene Period with modern mammal diversification.
- Paleogene Period with early mammal radiation.
- Mesozoic Era Periods:
- Cretaceous Period with dinosaur dominance.
- Jurassic Period (201MYA - 145MYA) with flying reptiles.
- Triassic Period (252MYA - 200MYA) with early dinosaurs.
- Paleozoic Era Periods:
- Permian Period (299MYA to 252MYA) with amniote diversification.
- Carboniferous Period (359MYA - 299MYA) with vast coal formations.
- Devonian Period with early tetrapods.
- Silurian Period (444MYA - 419MYA) with first land plants.
- Ordovician Period with marine invertebrate radiation.
- Cambrian Period (541MYA to 485.4MYA) with trilobite dominance.
- Cenozoic Era Periods:
- Precambrian Periods, such as:
- Proterozoic Era Periods:
- Siderian Period with earliest eukaryotes.
- Proterozoic Era Periods:
- ...
- Phanerozoic Geologic Periods, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Geological Era, which spans multiple geologic periods.
- Geological Epoch, which is a subdivision of a geologic period.
- Geological Age, which is a smaller time unit than a geologic period.
- See: Geologic Time, Geologic Time Scale, Stratigraphy, Paleontology, Mass Extinction Event.
References
2014
- (Wikipedia, 2014) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Period_(geology) Retrieved:2014-9-20.
- A geologic period is one of several subdivisions of geologic time enabling cross-referencing of rocks and geologic events from place to place.
These periods form elements of a hierarchy of divisions into which geologists have split the earth's history.
Eons and eras are larger subdivisions than periods while periods themselves may be divided into epochs and ages.
- A geologic period is one of several subdivisions of geologic time enabling cross-referencing of rocks and geologic events from place to place.