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Chapter 14
Mesozoic Earth History
245-65 Million years ago
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
Geologic Time Scale
www.geo.ucalgary.ca/~macrae/timescale/time_scale.gif
Main Happenings in Mesozoic
• Breakup of Pangaea
• Lots of mountain-building in western North America
• Appearance + extinction of dinosaurs
• More detail in the geologic record
– More climate information!
Climate information in the geologic
record
• Evaporites: precipitation < evaporation =
dry
• Coal = lots of vegetation + lots of moisture
• Sand dunes = dry
The hydrologic cycle and climate
Water moves heat from the
equator to the poles
• When water changes phase, it either
releases or takes up energy
• Evaporation: gaseous water carries energy
– Humid regions don’t get as hot
• Precipitation: releases energy as heat
– Humid regions don’t get as cold
• Ocean currents are the Earth’s heating and
AC ducts, moderating our climate
Tectonic drivers of climate
• Tectonics influences the hydrologic cycle
– Mountains can block rainfall
– Massive continents tend to have hotter, drier
cores
– Coastal regions are more moderate
• Circumpolar currents prevent heat from
reaching poles
• N/S currents move heat effectively
End Permian land and oceans
• Pangaea was shaped
like a ‘C’
• Inside ocean: Tethys
Sea
• Outside ocean:
Panthalassa
Panthalassa
Panthalassa
Tethys sea
www.ig.utexas.edu/research/projects/plates/images/pangea.jpg
Breakup of Pangea 1: Triple Junctions
• Seafloor spreading
creates a triple
junction: a point
where 3 tectonic
plates diverge
• North America split
off from S America
and Africa
Triple Junctions
Seafloor spreading raises sea
level
• Seafloor spreading causes bulges in ocean
basins
• Big enough bulges and/or lots of them
lowers the ocean volume
• This can cause flooding of the continents.
Breakup of Pangaea 2:
Opening of Gulf of Mexico
• In Middle Jurassic, North America and South
America separated
• Gulf of Mexico began to open
• Restricted basin at first – lots of evaporites deposited
Gulf of Mexico Salt
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/technology/tools/mapping/media/gis_gulf.html
Breakup of Pangaea 3:
Continued Widening of North Atlantic
• In Late Cretaceous, Atlantic widened rapidly
• Canada and Europe separated
Final Breakup
• In Late Cretaceous, Australia and Antarctica
separated
• In Cenozoic, Antarctica and South America separated
Global Plate Tectonics
Jurassic to Present Day
By
L.A. Lawver, M.F. Coffin, I.W.D. Dalziel
L.M. Gahagan, D.A. Campbell, and R.M. Schmitz
2001, University of Texas Institute for Geophysics
February 9, 2001
Paleogeography of the World
• During the Triassic Period
Paleogeography of the World
• During the Jurassic Period
Paleogeography of the World
• During the Late Cretaceous Period
Where did most North American
mountain-building occur during
Paleozoic?
Where did most North American
mountain-building occur during
Paleozoic?
East Coast - Appalachians
Cordillera
• Western margin of North America
• Spanish for “mountain range”
• Rocky Mountains, Sierra Nevadas
Cordillera Orogenies
• General term refering to complex period of
mountain-building Jurassic-Cenozoic
• Farallon plate goes below N American plate
– Nevadan orogeny – Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous
• Orogeny near the current W coast
• Slope of subducting Farallon plate decreased ->
– Sevier orogeny – Late Cretaceous
• Further east (Utah)
– Laramide orogeny – Late Cretaceous/Cenozoic
• Even FURTHER east! Rockies
Global Sea-Level Rise
• A global rise in sea level during the Cretaceous
– resulted in worldwide transgressions
– marine deposition was continuous over much of the
North American Cordillera
Cretaceous Flood
• Worldwide transgression
• 1/3 of land area of Earth submerged
• 100 Ma
• Cretaceous Interior Seaway in North America
Cretaceous Interior Seaway
• Paleogeography
of North America
during the
Cretaceous
Period
Western Interior Seaway
www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/westernseaway.gif
Western Interior Seaway
www.colorado-mall.com/HTML/EDUCATIONAL/SCIENCES/GEOLOGY/COLO_GEOLOGY/COLO_CREATION/ANCIENT_SEAS/ancient_seas.html
The Effects on Global Climates
and Ocean Circulation Patterns
• At the end of the Permian Period
– Pangaea extended from pole to pole
– Covered about one-fourth of Earth's surface
– Surrounded by a global ocean that encompassed about 300 degrees of
longitude
• Such a configuration exerted tremendous influence on the
world's climate
– resulted in generally arid conditions over large parts of Pangaea's
interior
Oceanic Circulation Evolved
• From a simple pattern in a single ocean
(Panthalassa) with a single continent (Pangaea)
Oceanic Circulation Evolved
• to a more complex pattern in the newly formed
oceans of the Cretaceous Period
Areas Dominated by Seas
Are Warmer
• Oceans absorb about 90% of the solar radiation they receive
– continents absorb only about 50%
– even less if they are snow covered
• The rest of the solar radiation is reflected back into space
• Therefore, areas dominated by seas are warmer than those
dominated by continents