- Late Triassic
The Late Triassic (also known as Upper Triassic, or Keuper) is the third and final of three epochs of the
Triassic period. It spans the time between 228 ± 2 Ma and 199.6 ± 0.6 Ma (million years ago). The Late Triassic is divided into theCarnian ,Norian andRhaetian faunal stage s. The name is a local miners' term of German origin; it corresponds to the French "marnes irises".Many of the first
dinosaur s evolved during the Late Triassic, including "Plateosaurus ", "Coelophysis ", and "Eoraptor ".Exposure
The formation is well exposed in
Swabia ,Franconia ,Alsace and Lorraine andLuxembourg ; it extends fromBasel on the east side of theRhine intoHanover , and throughEngland intoScotland and north-eastIreland ; it appears flanking the central plateau ofFrance and in thePyrenees andSardinia .Representatives of the Rhaetic are found in south
Sweden , where the lower portion contains workable coals, in theHimalayas ,Japan ,Tibet ,Burma , easternSiberia and inSpitsbergen . The upper portion of theKarroo beds ofSouth Africa and part of the Otapiri series ofNew Zealand are probably of Rhaetic age.Germany
In the German region it is usual to divide the Keuper into three groups;
*Rhaetic or upper Keuper:The upper part of this division is often a greydolomite known as the Grenz dolomite; the impurecoal beds Lettenko/ileare aggregated towards the base. The upper Keuper, Rhaetic or Avicula contorta zone in Germany is mainly sandy with dark greyshale s andmarl s; it is seldom more than 25 metres thick. The sandstones are used for building purposes atBayreuth , Culmbach andBamberg . In Swabia and the Wesergebirge are severalbone -beds, thicker than those in the middle Keuper, which contain a rich assemblage of fossil remains of fish, reptiles and the mammalian teeth of "Microlestes antiquus" and "Triglyptzas Fraasi". The name "Rhaetic" is derived from the Rhaetic Alps where the beds are well developed; they occur also in central France, the Pyrenees and England. In South Tirol and the Judic. arian Mountains the Rhaetic is represented by the Kossenei beds. In the Alpine region the presence of coral beds gives rise to the so-called Lithodendron Kalk.
*"Hauptkeuper" or "Gipskeuper", the middle:The middle division is thicker than either of the others (at Göttingen, 450 metres); it consists of a marly series below, grey, red and green marls, withgypsum and dolomite—this is the gypskeuper in its restricted sense. The higher part of the series issand y, hence called the Steinmergel; it is comparatively free from gypsum. To this division belong theMyophoria beds (M. Raibliana ) withgalena in places; theEstheria beds (E. laxilesta ); the Schelfsandstein, used as a building-stone; theLehrherg andBerg-gyp s beds;Semionotus beds (S. Bergen ) with building-stone ofCoburg ; and the Burgand Stubensandstein.
*"Kohlenkeuper" or "Lettenkohle", the lower:The lower division consists mainly of greyclay s and schieferletten with white, grey and brightly coloredsandstone and dolomiticlimestone .The
salt , which is associated with gypsum, is exploited in south Germany at Dreuze, Pettoncourt, andBad Wimpfen on theNeckar , as well as in Vie in the Lorraine region of France. A 4-metre coal is found on this horizon in theErzgebirge on the border between Germany and theCzech Republic , and another, 2 metres thick, has been mined inUpper Silesia , now inPoland .Great Britain
In Great Britain the Keuper contains the following sub divisions:
*Rhaetic or Penarth:Grey, red and green marls, black shales, and so-called white has (10150 ft.). Upper Keuper marl, red and grey marls and shales with rock salt (800300o ft.). As in Germany, there are one or more bone beds in the English Rhaetic with a similar assemblage of fossils.
*Lower Keuper:Sandstone, marls and thin sandstones at the top, red and white sandstones (including the so-called waterstones) below, with breccias and conglomerates at the base (15o250 ft.).
*Basal conglomerate:A shore or scree breccia derived from local materials; it is well developed in theMendip district. The rocksalt beds vary from 1 in. to 100 ft. in thickness; they are extensively worked (mined and pumped) inCheshire ,Middlesbrough and Antrim.The Keuper covers a large area in the
Midlands and around the flanks of the Pennine range; it reaches southward to the Devonshire coast, eastward intoYorkshire and northwestward into north Ireland and south Scotland. In the white has the upper hard limestone is known as the sun bed or Jew stone; at the base is the Cotham or landscape marble.Fossils
The Keuper is not rich in
fossil s; the principal plants are cypresslikeconifer s ("Walchia ", "Voltzia") and a fewcalamites with such forms as "Equisetum arenaceum" and "Pterophyllum jaegeri", "Avicula contorta", "Protocardium rhaeticum", "Terebratula gregaria", "Myophoria costata", "M. goldfassi" and "Lingula tenuessima", "Anoplophoria lettica" may be mentioned among the invertebrates. Fishes include Ceratodus, "Hybodus" and "Lepidotus".Labyrinthodont s represented by the footprints of "Cheirotherium" and the bones of "Labyrinthodon", "Mastodonsaurus" and "Capitosaurus". Among thereptile s are "Hyperodapedon", "Palaeosaurus", "Zanclodon", "Nothosaurus" and "Belodon". The first fossilmammal s also make their appearance at this time.References
* [http://www.stratigraphy.org/geowhen/stages/Late_Triassic.html GeoWhen Database - Late Triassic]
ee also
*
Triassic-Jurassic extinction event
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.