QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- differentiate between the geology of the continents of the paleozoic, mesozoic, and cenozoic eras.
Brief Explanations
To answer this, we analyze each era's geology:
- Paleozoic (541–252 mya):
- Continental: Early - shallow seas covered many cratons (e.g., Laurentia had inland seas). Late - supercontinent Pangaea began forming (collisions like Appalachian - Caledonian orogenies).
- Tectonics: Orogenies (mountain - building) from continental collisions (e.g., Acadian Orogeny). Sedimentation: Shallow - marine sediments (limestones, shales) from extensive seas.
- Mesozoic (252–66 mya):
- Continental: Pangaea fully formed (Early) then rifted (Late, forming Atlantic, Indian Oceans). Cratons stabilized; rift basins (e.g., East African Rift) and volcanic provinces (e.g., Deccan Traps) formed.
- Tectonics: Pangaea breakup (mid - Mesozoic) via seafloor spreading. Mountain - building: Cordilleran Orogeny (western North America) from subduction. Sedimentation: Continental redbeds (arid climates) and marine sediments in new ocean basins.
- Cenozoic (66 mya–present):
- Continental: Continued Pangaea breakup (e.g., Australia - Antarctica split). Alpine - Himalayan Orogeny (collision of India - Eurasia, forming Himalayas) and Andean - Rocky Mountain orogenies (subduction - driven).
- Tectonics: Active subduction (Pacific “Ring of Fire”), continental collisions, and rifting (East African Rift). Sedimentation: Thick continental sediments (e.g., Gulf Coast basins) and glacial deposits (Pleistocene ice ages).
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Paleozoic Era (541–252 mya)
- Continental Configuration: Early - Shallow seas (e.g., inland seas on Laurentia) covered cratons; late - Pangaea (supercontinent) formed via collisions (e.g., Appalachian - Caledonian orogenies).
- Tectonics/Sedimentation: Orogenies (mountain - building) from continental collisions; shallow - marine sediments (limestones, shales) dominated.
Mesozoic Era (252–66 mya)
- Continental Configuration: Early - Pangaea (full supercontinent); late - Pangaea rifted (Atlantic/Indian Oceans formed), with rift basins/volcanic provinces (e.g., Deccan Traps).
- Tectonics/Sedimentation: Pangaea breakup (seafloor spreading); Cordilleran Orogeny (subduction - driven); continental redbeds (arid) and marine sediments in new oceans.
Cenozoic Era (66 mya–present)
- Continental Configuration: Pangaea fully rifted (e.g., Australia - Antarctica split); Himalayas (India - Eurasia collision) and Andean/Rocky Mountains (subduction) formed.
- Tectonics/Sedimentation: Active subduction (“Ring of Fire”), glacial deposits (Pleistocene), and thick continental sediments (e.g., Gulf Coast).