Mississippian
- Not to be confused with the "Mississippian period" describing the dominance of the Mississippian culture.
| System | Subsystem/ Series |
Stage | Age (Ma) |
||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Permian | Cisuralian | Asselian | younger | ||
| Carboniferous | Pennsylvanian | Gzhelian | 298.9–303.7 | ||
| Kasimovian | 303.7–307.0 | ||||
| Moscovian | 307.0–315.2 | ||||
| Bashkirian | 315.2–323.2 | ||||
| Mississippian | Serpukhovian | 323.2–330.9 | |||
| Viséan | 330.9–346.7 | ||||
| Tournaisian | 346.7–358.9 | ||||
| Devonian | Upper | Famennian | older | ||
| Subdivision of the Carboniferous system according to the ICS.[1] | |||||
The Mississippian is a subperiod in the geologic timescale or a subsystem of the geologic record. It is the earliest/lowermost of two subperiods of the Carboniferous period lasting from roughly 358.9 ± 0.4 to 323.2 ± 0.4 million years ago. As with most other geochronologic units, the rock beds that define the Mississippian are well identified, but the exact start and end dates are uncertain by a few million years. The Mississippian is so named because rocks with this age are exposed in the Mississippi River valley.
The Mississippian was a period of marine ingression in the Northern Hemisphere: the ocean stood so high only the Fennoscandian Shield and the Laurentian Shield stood above sea level. The cratons were surrounded by extensive delta systems and lagoons, and carbonate sedimentation on the surrounding continental platforms, covered by shallow seas.[2]
In North America, where the interval consists primarily of marine limestones, it was in the past treated as a full-fledged geologic period between the Devonian and the Pennsylvanian. During the Mississippian subperiod an important phase of orogeny occurred in the Appalachian Mountains.
In Europe, the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian are one more-or-less continuous sequence of lowland continental deposits and are grouped together as the Carboniferous system, and sometimes called the Upper Carboniferous and Lower Carboniferous instead.
Subdivisions [edit]
In the official geologic timescale, the Mississippian is subdivided into three stages:
- Serpukhovian (330.9 ± 0.2 to 323.2 ± 0.4 mya)
- Visean (346.7 ± 0.4 to 330.9 ± 0.2 mya)
- Tournaisian (358.9 ± 0.4 to 346.7 ± 0.4 mya)
The first two come from European stratigraphy, the last is from Russian stratigraphy. Besides Europe and Russia, there are many local subdivisions that are used as alternatives for the international timescale. In the North American system, the Mississippian is subdivided into four stages:
- Kinderhookian (the lower two-thirds of the Tournaisian)
- Osagean (top of the Tournaisian and bottom of the Visean)
- Meramecian (middle Visean)
- Chesterian (top of the Visean plus the Serpukhovian)
References [edit]
- ^ "International Chronostratigraphic Chart". International Commission on Stratigraphy. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- ^ Cesare Emiliani, Planet Earth: Cosmology, Geology, and the Evolution of Life and Environment 1992 496.
External links [edit]
- "The Carboniferous Period". University of california. 1998. Retrieved October 2012.
- "Foraminifera Gallery Database search for Mississippian Foraminifera". Foraminifera.eu. Retrieved October 2012.
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