early mesozoic of iowa

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Earth History, Ch. 16 1 Early Mesozoic of Iowa No Triassic rocks in Iowa (surface or subsurface) Jurassic rocks crop out in vicinity of Ft. Dodge (Webster County) Ft. Dodge Formation is gypsum deposit (evaporite) – Iowa is 2 nd largest gypsum producing state in U.S. (1.65 million tons/year) Same age as dinosaur-bearing Morrison Formation to the west

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Early Mesozoic of Iowa. No Triassic rocks in Iowa (surface or subsurface) Jurassic rocks crop out in vicinity of Ft. Dodge (Webster County) Ft. Dodge Formation is gypsum deposit (evaporite) Iowa is 2 nd largest gypsum producing state in U.S. (1.65 million tons/year) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

Earth History, Ch. 16 1

Early Mesozoic of Iowa• No Triassic rocks in Iowa (surface or

subsurface)• Jurassic rocks crop out in vicinity of Ft.

Dodge (Webster County)– Ft. Dodge Formation is gypsum deposit

(evaporite)– Iowa is 2nd largest gypsum producing state in

U.S. (1.65 million tons/year)– Same age as dinosaur-bearing Morrison

Formation to the west

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Earth History, Ch. 17 2

MiddleJurassic

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Earth History, Ch. 16 3

Ft. Dodge Formation

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Earth History, Ch. 16 4

Jurassic rocksof midcontinent

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Earth History, Ch. 16 5

Cardiff Giant

• Man-like figure carved from Ft. Dodge gypsum

• 10’ 4.5” long, 3’ wide, 2990 pounds

• Cooked up as a hoax in 1866 by George Hull (visiting his sister in Ackley, Iowa)

• Now preserved in Cooperstown, New York

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Earth History, Ch. 17 6

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Earth History, Ch. 17 7

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Earth History, Ch. 16 8

Cardiff Giant

Sold for $37,500 and then put on display

Page 9: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

Earth History, Ch. 17 9P.T. Barnum’s fake of a fake

“There’s a sucker born every minute” (David Hannum)

Page 10: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

Earth History, Ch. 17 10

Cretaceous World• Cretaceous System

was named in 1822 for deposits that are “chalky” in many parts of the world

• Duration of Cretaceous Period is longer than any other

142

206

65

251

CretaceousSystem

TriassicSystem

JurassicSystemM

esoz

oic

Era

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Earth History, Ch. 17 11

Rise of the angiosperms

• Gymnosperms continued to dominate terrestrial floras in Cretaceous (just as in Triassic and Jurassic)

• Angiosperms initial appearance was in middle Cretaceous time– Double-fertilization and enclosed seeds

– Flowers (for attracting insects)

– Co-evolution wih insects

– Faster reproductive cycles

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Earth History, Ch. 17 12

Angiosperm diversification

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Earth History, Ch. 17 13

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Earth History, Ch. 17 14

Rudist reef

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Earth History, Ch. 17 16

Tyrannosaurus rex

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Earth History, Ch. 17 17

Warm-blooded Dinosaurs?

• Evidence in support of endothermy– Cretaceous dinos lived in high latitudes– Birds are endothermic, and birds are highly

specialized dinosaurs– Dinosaur bone structure resembles that in

endothermic mammals• Haversian canals

• But………

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Earth History, Ch. 17 18

Dinosaur bone structure

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Earth History, Ch. 17 19

Sue!!

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Earth History, Ch. 17 20

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Earth History, Ch. 17 21

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Earth History, Ch. 17 22

End-Cretaceous mass extinction

• Geologically instantaneous • Non-avian Dinosaurs, mosasaurs,

plesiosaurs, rudists and ammonoids were totally eliminated

• Angiosperms and gymnosperms suffered big hits

• 90% of the species of calcareous nannoplankton and planktonic foraminifers were wiped out

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Earth History, Ch. 17 23

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Earth History, Ch. 17 24

End-Cretaceous mass extinction

• Cause is controversial– Asteroid impact– Volcanism (Deccan Traps, India)

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Earth History, Ch. 17 25

End-Cretaceous mass extinction

• Mineral evidence for asteroid impact:– Iridium anomaly at top of Cretaceous in both marine

and terrestrial rocks• Iridium is rare on Earth, but abundant in meteorites

– Shocked quartz grains• Welded planar fractures due to enormous pressure

– Microspherules• Liquefied droplets of molten rock that cool rapidly

– Microscopic diamonds• Again, high pressure minerals

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Iridium layer at Gubbio, Italy

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Mineral evidenceIridium layer nearDrumheller insouthern Alberta,Canada

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Mineral evidence

microspherulesshocked quartz

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Earth History, Ch. 17 30

End-Cretaceous mass extinction

• Further evidence for asteroid impact:– The crater itself has been discovered in the Gulf

of Mexico, just offshore Yucatan Peninsula

• Chicxulub crater– Central cavity (60 miles in diameter)– Outer ring (120 miles in diameter)– Magma that cooled after impact is dated at 65 ±

0.4 Ma, exactly same as end-Cretaceous boundary

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Earth History, Ch. 17 31

Lab exam“What is it?”• Plants

– Ferns– Sphenopsids– Lycopsids

• Protists– Fusulinids

• Echinoderms– Crinoids– Blastoids

• Mollusks– Pelecypods

– Gastropods

– Ammonoids• Goniatitic suture

• Ceratitic suture

• Ammonitic suture

– Belemnites

• Cnidarians (corals)– Rugose

– Tabulate

– Scleractinian

Page 32: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

Earth History, Ch. 17 32

Chicxulub crater

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Earth History, Ch. 17 33

Radar image of Chicxulub crater

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Earth History, Ch. 17 34

Chicxulub crater

Gravity surveydata

trajectory

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Earth History, Ch. 17 35

Effects of the impact

• Perpetual darkness from atmospheric dust• Short-term global refrigeration from dust

and aerosol particles (like “nuclear winter”)• Acid rain from sulfur dioxide and water in

atmosphere• Wildfires, especially in North America• Long-term global warming from aerosols

that stayed in atmosphere

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Earth History, Ch. 17 36

Aftermath

• Although angiosperms suffered loss of diversity, they recovered to become the dominant flora

• With dinosaurs out of the way, mammals diversified spectacularly in post-extinction Cenozoic Era

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Earth History, Ch. 17 37

Continued break-up of Pangaea

• Remember: Pangaea began to break up during early Mesozoic– Triassic rifting between N. Africa and S.

Europe – Jurassic rifting between N. America and S.

America; between N. America and Africa– But, Gondwanaland remained intact

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Cretaceous paleogeography

• By late Cretaceous time:– South America, Africa and India had become

discrete entities– Only Australia and Antarctica remained

attached to one another– Greenland split from North America– Sea-level nearly at an all-time high

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Early Triassic

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Late Triassic

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Early Jurassic

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Middle Jurassic

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Late Jurassic

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Early Cretaceous

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Late early Cretaceous

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Late Cretaceous

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Cretaceous geology ofNorth America

• East coast, now a passive continental margin, was mostly quiet

• West coast, a convergent margin, continued to experience mountain building– Sevier orogeny produced folding and thrusting

as far east as Wyoming; igneous activity in California, Nevada, Idaho, and farther north

Page 49: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

Earth History, Ch. 17 49

Western U.S.orogenies

Page 50: Early Mesozoic of Iowa

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Sevier Orogeny

Nevadan Orogeny

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Cretaceous geology ofNorth America

• Interior seaway developed when continent was flooded: Arctic Ocean joined with Gulf of Mexico

• Late Cretaceous rocks of interior seaway are cyclic deposits produced by oscillation of shoreline– Nearshore sand facies

– Shallow marine shale facies

– Offshore chalk facies

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Late Cretaceous cyclic deposits

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Rememberthis?

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