- Chronozone
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- For articles dealing with the fundamentals of geologic chronology, see: Biostratigraphy#Concept of zone, chronology (geology), and geologic time scale
Units in geochronology and stratigraphy[1] Segments of rock (strata) in chronostratigraphy Periods of time in geochronology Notes Eonothem Eon 4 total, half a billion years or more Erathem Era 12 total, several hundred million years System Period Series Epoch tens of millions of years Stage Age millions of years Chronozone Chron smaller than an age/stage, not used by the ICS timescale A chronozone or chron is a slice of time that begins at a given identifiable event and ends at another. In the fossil record such tracer events are usually keyed to disappearance (extinction) of a widely distributed and rapidly changing species or the appearance of such a species in the geological record. Chronozones or chrons are used especially in the various disciplines related to geology, notably in stratigraphy where relative dating is employed.
There are also events susceptible to identification and analysis by the physical sciences, such as Earth's magnetic field reversals or the location of a combination of chemical evidence in a layer corresponding to the meteor strike believed to have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs. Hence chronozones, and the international identification and acceptance of a widespread chronozone as an official useful marker or benchmark of time in the rock record, is non-hierarchical in that chronozones do not need to correspond across geographic or geologic boundaries, nor be equal in length (despite an early constraint that one be defined as smaller than a geological stage[2]). A chronozone is usually defined in geologic terms for a geographical area by fossil names (biozone or biochronozone) or in worldwide terms by geomagnetic reversal identifiers (polarity chronozone).
According to the International Commission on Stratigraphy, chronozone is the term used to refer to the rocks formed during the period of time in question, while the word chron refers to that time period.[3] The key factor in designating an internationally acceptable chronozone is whether the overall fossil column is clear, unambiguous, and widespread. Hence, some accepted chronozones contain others, and certain larger chronozones have been designated which span whole define geological time units, both large and small.
For example, the chronozone known as the Reign of Tiberius (14 to 37 AD) is a subset of the chronozone Imperial Rome. Similarly the chronozone Pleistocene is a subset of the chronozone Neogene.
Contents
See also
- Body form
- European Mammal Neogene
- Geologic time scale
- North American Land Mammal Age
- Fauna (animals)
- Type locality
- List of GSSAa
- List of GSSPs
Notes
- ^ International Commission on Stratigraphy. "International Stratigraphic Chart". http://www.stratigraphy.org/upload/ISChart2009.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
- ^ An early use in Harland, W.B., Armstrong, R.L., Cox, A.V., Craig, L.E., Smith, A.G., and Smith, D.G. (1989) A Geologic Time Scale Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, was hierarchical in that chronozone was used for the slice of time smaller than a Faunal stage defined in Biostratigraphy. This usage has been superseded by the ICS.
- ^ "Magnetostratigraphic polarity units" International Commission on Stratigraphy
References
- Gehling, James; Jensen, Sören; Droser, Mary; Myrow, Paul; Narbonne, Guy (March 2001). "Burrowing below the basal Cambrian GSSP, Fortune Head, Newfoundland". Geological Magazine 138 (2): 213–218. doi:10.1017/S001675680100509X. 1. http://www.journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=74669.
- Hedberg, H.D., (editor), International stratigraphic guide: A guide to stratigraphic classification, terminology, and procedure, New York, John Wiley and Sons, 1976
- International Stratigraphic Chart from the International Commission on Stratigraphy
- USA National Park Service
- Washington State University
- Web Geological Time Machine
- Eon or Aeon, Math Words - An alphabetical index
External links
- The Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP): overview
- Chart of The Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points (GSSP): chart
- Geotime chart displaying geologic time periods compared to the fossil record
Chronology Main articles Time · Astronomy · Geology · Paleontology · Archaeology · History
Eras and epochs Canon of Kings · Lists of kings · Limmu · Seleucid era
Astronomic time Geologic time ConceptsStandardsMethodsArchaeological
methodsGenetic methods Related topics Chronicle · New Chronology · Periodization · Synchronoptic view · Timeline · Year zero · Circa · Floruit · ASPRO chronology
Categories:- Earth sciences
- Geochronology
- Geologic time scale
- Geology timelines
- Historical geology
- Paleogeography
- Paleobiology
- Units of time
- Stratigraphy
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