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Paleoenvironment of Utah: Fading the Mists of Time. NA Southwest. Late Permian. Pangea Supercontinent Laurasia and Gondwanaland Tethys Sea Cutler and Kaibab Limestone. Permo-Triassic Extinction. Most devasting mass extinction – 90-95% of marine species died out
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NA Southwest Late Permian • Pangea Supercontinent • Laurasia and Gondwanaland • Tethys Sea • Cutler and Kaibab Limestone
Permo-Triassic Extinction • Most devasting mass extinction – 90-95% of marine species died out 75% of vertebrate families went extinct, synapsids heavily hit • Casualites: Trilobites, Tabulate and Rugose Corals, Pareiasaurs, Cordaites • Causes: Many! Severe climatic fluctuations, Siberian traps, Oceanic Overturn • Seen at Capital Reef NP
NA Southwest Triassic • Pangea begins to break up • Adaptive radiation of flora and fauna • Archosauromorphs become dominant vertebrates • Utah = 5-10 degrees North of the Equator
Early (240 Ma): Moenkopi Shinarump Conglomerate Late (215 Ma): Chinle Upper Triassic Triassic
Globally warmer by 6˚C, with little latitudinal variation No polar ice caps Climatic Shift from warm and moist to hot and dry Large landmass = interior continental desert with high seasonality Utah: semiarid to subhumid climate Paleosols of Moenkopi record MAP 300-400mm and MAT 13-23˚C desert shrub or dry woodlands Paleosols of Lower Chinle record MAP 700-900mm, but up to 1400mm and MAT 18˚C open forest (Petrified Forest) Paleosols of Upper Chinle record MAP 400-600mm and MAT 29˚C desert shrub or dry woodlands Triassic Paleoclimate
Triassic Flora and Fauna • Flora: seed ferns, cycads, conifers • Fauna: Archosauria: Dinosaurs! • Climatic warming mirrored in floral and faunal turnovers Massospondylus Cycad Ceolophysis
NA Southwest Jurassic • Pangea breaks up into North America, Eurasia, and Gondwana as the North Atlantic Sea opens • Tethys Sea closed • Spread of Dinosaurs
Jurassic • Navajo Sandstone Widespread Coastal Dunes • Great Navajo “sand sea” spreads across interior of Western North America. • Epicontinental seaway present = Some shallow marine excursions • Late Jurassic uplift to the West causes stream direction to reverse, expanding deposition of dinosaur fossil-bearing Morrison Fm Namibian Desert, SW Africa
Globally warm and moist climate, prevailing up to the polar regions Southwestern North America: Arid Coastal Desert Thicknesses of annual depositional cycles within the Navajo Sandstone indicate strong near-equatorial, north-westerly winds Mountains to the West enhanced wind strength, and cast a rain shadow, allowing active dunes to extend very close to the palaeoequator. Jurassic Paleoclimate
Jurassic Flora and Fauna • Conifers: most diverse, majority of tall trees • Cycads, tree ferns and gingkos • Age of Dinosaurs • Pterosaurs • First mammals Gingko Morganucodon
NA Southwest Cretaceous • Break-up of Pangea into present day continents complete • Dinosaurs continue terrestrial dominance • Radiation of Angiosperms
Cretaceous • Mancos Shale Marine shale, overlain by shallow marine sandstones and fluvial deposits. • The Western Interior is the site of an encroaching epicontinental seaway from the north. • Mountain building orogenies to the West
Cretaceous Paleoclimate • Globally warm and moist climate – Tropics 9-12˚C warmer than today, Deep Ocean 15-20˚ warmer than today • Increased Sea level = Epiconinental Seaways • Extensive tropical ocean stabilized global climate, gentle temperature laditudinal gradient • Weaker global winds
Cretaceous Flora and Fauna • Angiosperms diversify, dominant Late Cretaceous – coevolution with insects • Age of Dinosaurs • Birds