- Zuñi sequence
The Zuñi sequence was the major
cratonic sequence after the Absaroka sequence that began in the latestJurassic , peaked in the lateCretaceous , and ended by the start of the followingPaleocene . [Stanley, Steven M. "Earth System History." p. 175] Though it was not the final major transgression, it was the last complete sequence to cover theNorth America ncraton ; the followingTejas sequence was much less extensive.Cause and Progression
Like other sequences, the Zuñi was probably caused by a mantle plume - more specifically, the "Mid-Cretaceous Superplume" event. A mass of unusually hot rock rose from the lower mantle to the base of the
lithosphere , fueling a dramatic increase seafloor spreading rates; this caused the hotter mid-ocean ridges to increase in volume, thus displacing the oceans onto thecontinent s. [Larson, Roger L. "The Mid-Cretaceous Superplume Episode". Scientific American Special: Our Ever Changing Earth. p. 26]Sea level rose in earnest beginning in the early Cretaceous, until byCenomanian time it was roughly 250meters (800+ feet) higher than today. [Larson, pp. 25-6] This was the time of the greatWestern Interior Seaway , and the widespread continental deposition ofcarbonate s andshale elsewhere. [Larson, pp. 25-6] , [Stanley, pp. 479-80] There were also intervals where black shale accumulated in abundance on the continents, indicative of a stagnant water column; apparently water in the polar oceans was too warm to sink and oxygenate the deep-sea, as it does today. [Stanley, p. 480] Many of these black shales are now richpetroleum sources. [Stanley, p. 480]The waters of the Zuñi sequence began to subside late in the Cretaceous period, and by early in the
Cenozoic a new craton-wideunconformity in North America indicates a complete regression before the Tejas sequence of the latePaleogene . [Stanley, p. 175]ee also
*
Ontong-Java Plateau
*Sequence stratigraphy Footnotes
References:
*Larson, Roger L. "The Mid-Cretaceous Superplume Episode". "Scientific American Special: Our Ever Changing Earth." Vol. 15, No. 2, 2005. pp. 22-7.
*Stanley, Steven M. "Earth System History." New York: W.H. Freeman and Company, 1999. ISBN 0716728826
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