Ager - Derek - The Nature of Stratigraphical Record (3rd Edition-1993) PDF
Ager - Derek - The Nature of Stratigraphical Record (3rd Edition-1993) PDF
Ager - Derek - The Nature of Stratigraphical Record (3rd Edition-1993) PDF
of Eacies 3
ThePersistence
TheNatureof theStratigraphical
Record
LIMESTONES
'l'owards
I igurr l.l
Sltrtitr(l)VA)
lll'rrrrirlrt *tilrlnniltl ill ('u(nn, srrttl/r-r'rts/
Record
TheNatureof the Stratigraphical
of Facies 5
The Persistence
Bulgaria
nearGabroao,
aboaeDrvanoaamonastery,
t igura1.3 l)rgonianlimestone
ThePersistence
of Facies 7
aptychi, nautiloid jaws, specialisedbelemnitesand the aberrant
brachiopodwith the hole in the middle Pygope.Inthe Jura the
'fithonian
can be seen in placesto be a coral reef limestone, but
usually the corals have been obliterated by dolomitisation and
cledolomitisationas is commonly the fate of reefs.
It might also be said that the Portland Limestone of southern
Irrrgland is the Tithonian limestone in yet another form, with
what is mainly a molluscan fauna of limited diversity. But the
tcrm 'Tithonian', though not quite so lacking in respectability
.rs the 'Urgonian', is usually reserved for the carbonatefacies
of alpine Europe, and for years competed with the 'Volgian' the
Ironour of being the acceptedinternationalterm for the topmost
st;rgeof the Jurassic.
In its reef or reef-like facies, the Tithonian continues round
thc Alps, the Carpathians, the Balkan Mountains to the
('.rucasus.Where best developed, for exampleat Stramberk in
('zcchoslovakia,it contains a rich and varied fauna including
rrrassivecompound corals(though the fossilsare more obvious
TITHONIAN
LIMESTONES
'lrttn
I igurr L5 I'ithorriutrlinn'slonrcnpyittglurnssit'srrrlr'ssirur
nt tltt'
Gates', uthere
tltr l)uttulu'llotos lltrou'tlt llrc ('nrynlltittrs ltcltt,t,tuRonwria fun the right) and
Yljrrs/rtt,irt(otr lltt hlt) (l)VA)
of Facies 9
The Persistence
Bulgaria(DVA)
north-zuest
at Belogradchik,
sandstone
I igure1.6 LowerTriassic
I rcgard with some scepticism the notion that the boulders here
travelled so far). Along the Rio Cabriel in Spain, it is the same/
lrrrt there the source quartzite outcrops immediately below. Near
Ilt'logradchik, in north-west Bulgaria, again the basal conglomerate
rs largely composed of exactly similar purple quartzite pebbles
(r t'sting on Permian breccias also like those of Midland England).
I vt'rr if one postulates continent-wide uplift to produce the
r onglomerate in such widely separated places, it is very difficult
to t'xplain why the source rock is also so remarkably similar from
.rlt' cfld of Europe to the other.
Agirin, we can go even farther afield. It is well known that,
.rP,lrt from its basalts, the Newark Supergroup of the eastern
rr',rboerrdof the United States is exactly like the Trias of northrvt,st lJurope, and both are now known to have been largely
.lr,P1rsiledin fault-controlled basins. The similarities are almost
'Building
Stones' of the basal
l.rrrghal'rle,even to the extent of the
like the
remarkably
being
KctrPcr near Birmingham, England,
'brownstone' houses of much of
s,rrrtlstonewhich provided the
,'ltl New York C-'ity.If we go to the High Atlas of Morocco, we
Irrrrlt'ven ckrser similirrities,with basic intrusions and extrusions
n itlritt tht fanriliar rccl sirlrcistone.
acrossthe Atlantic,
I lon't'r't r, n'lrt'n I tnakc tltt'st' colttp-r.tris()lts
'platc
tt'cttlnics'.Otrvitlusly
I r.rr),rlnr()stht.ar tttV rt'.trlt'rssaying:
of Facies 11
ThePersistence
Figure7'7 Road-cutting
in
o'!,;uTr;;:"{'#;';riiKation'
Highznav
40 near
12
of Facies L3
The Persistence
ErnP"f;f;;Quarry,
limestone,
I igure1.9 Mississippian
was used to build the high monument to the Grande Arm6e that
overlooks Boulogne (With Napoleon at the top firmly turning his
back on England), the Indiana quarry produced the stone facings
for the Empire State Building in New York.
AII the physiographicalfeatures of the Mid-Western Mississippian are familiar to the man from the English Pennines or the
Mendips. The Mammoth Cave of Kentucky is nothing more than
a rather larger Americanisedversion of Wookey Hole in Somerset
or the Dan-yr-Ogof cavesin South Wales.
However, this is a casewhere the stratigraphical wood cannot
be seenfor the nomenclatural trees. Whereasthe British, in their
old-fashioned way, have usually stuck to the general term
'CarboniferousLimestone'
to cover all the varied carbonatefacies
of this age, the Americans-for very good local reasons-have
Indinna,
nearBloomington,
The Persistence
of Facies 15
(Mississippian),
I tturc '1.11 RundleLimestone
of Mount
forming the escarpment
Rundle, aboaeBanff, Alberta, Canada(DVA)
in the
7.10 RedwailLimestone(Mississippian)
Figure
formi.ngthe.mostobztious.diff
Grand Canyon,as seenfrorn the Powell Memoial, Arizona, USA (DVA)
76
1n
oa
l-\
TG'
ri=
"\s
Eq
*-n'
*s!
o-
$E
x'=
i5I
>.,
InEs
\..q
J,\
q-
oa
F*
st!
9.s
.S=
R<
i3
.R ^:
6bo
Figure1.12 UpperDeaonian
limestone
escarpment
with reet'
deoelopments
in thelower
(Frasnian)
(DVA)
part, Chinaryan's
Leap,nearCanmore,
Alberta,Canada
;.- s-
s2
Carboniferous Limestone mentioned earlier in Kashmir. There.
not only does the fish fauna closely resemble that of the Middle
Old Red Sandstone in Scotland, but the sediments themselves
are said to be exactly like the Thurso Flagstone Group of
Caithness. So it is not merely marine deposits that are so
incredibly persistent about the earth's surface. It is also found,
with similar fish fossils such as Bothriolepis, in Australia.
si gc
$v
'n.R
^a>
-\
*j
s'S
oa
E*
MID.SILURIAN LIMESTONES
HO
sr
m"\
tsS
\x
*,*
;i--:
of Facies 19
The Persistence
Record
18 TheNatureof theStratigraphical
(more thinly bedded below) of Mid Silurian age. Minireefs, or
'ballstones', are developed in most outcrops of this Wenlock
Limestone, though they nowhere approach the size of the
reefs discussedearlier. Similar reef limestones extend up to
Scandinavia,where they reach their finest development in the
island of Gotland out in the Baltic.
On a much grander scaleare the Niagaranlimestonesaround
the Great Lakes in North America, where the reefs reach
tremendous proportions, such as the splendid Thornton Reef
on the outskirts of Chicago.But in time terms, theselimestones
are very much of the sameage as those in Europe and, as I have
said elsewhere, 'the Niagara Falls are nothing more than the
NiagaraRiver falling over an escarpmentof Wenlock Limestone'.
ARENIG QUARTZITES
In the Ordovician of my corner of the world, the most remarkable
exampleof persistenceof faciesis that of the purple and white
...:
:lji;il , t i::.ll
ThePersistence
of Facies 23
at Nusplingen in the Swabian Jura, at Talbrager in New South
Wales and in the central Congo.
The above are selected examples from among many, of
discontinuous distributions of similar synchronous deposits.
'fhere
are even more examplesof very thin units that persist over
fantastically large areas in particular sedimentary basins.
l.ithological units of 30m or less in the Permian of western
('anada, have been shown to persist over areas up to
470000km2. The thin basal member of the Trias, about a metre
thick, can be found all round the Alpine chain.
The occurrenceof banded ironstones around the world in late
I'recambrianrocks is well known. Particularly noteworthy is the
t,conomicallyimportant Animikie Basin, with the fabulous Mesabi,
Marquette and other ranges, at the west end of Lake Superior
in North America. Others of about the same age (i.e. about 2000
rrrillion years BP) are the TransvaalBasin in South Africa, the
llamersley Basin in WesternAustralia and the Dharwars Series
ol' India. All have the banded or varved iron formations that are
r'haracteristicof this episodein earth history. Even more remark,rlrlc, however, is the fact that individual bands can be traced
ovt r vast areas.Thus in the valuable Brockman Iron Formation
rrl the HamersleyBasin, bands2-3 centimetresthick are said to be
t orrelatableover an areaof some52000km2and even microscopic
r'.rrveswithin those bands can be traced over nearly 300km.
l.ike wartime bomb stories,every geologistseemsto have his
orvn favourite exampleto cap all others. Like a politician, I may
Ir,rve overstated my case to make my point. Those who are
l,rst'inatedby the minutiae of stratigraphicalcorrelationmay be
lrorrified at my generalisations.But I find myself left with what
rrr,rybe called the first main proposition of this book:
Al cartaintimesin earth history, particulartypesof sedimentary
rttlironment werepreaalentoaer aast areasof the earth's surface.
I lris may be calledthe 'Phenomenonof the Persistenceof Facies'.
REFERENCES
'On someTurkishSediments',
,\pit.r,l). V. (1958).
Geol.
Mag.,Vol.95,
u3-u4.
I'l').
A trriefnote recording(amongother things)north-westEuropean
tvlrt C'halkon the southsideof the BlackSea.
|..J
@
HALORELLA ond
HALORELLOIDEA
A
i/0
4n
\S
/
t')
(le
*9,.\-
-/<\
t)
o Rccorded occurrcnce in Uppcr. Triossic
O Confirmed occurrencc in Upper Triossic
Y^b
v
P E R E G RI N E L L A
N)
andArchaean
marinesediments
Figure3.7 llnconformitybetwemUpperCretaceous
(DVA)
gneissof the BohemianMassif, nmr Kolin, Czechoslaaakia
PLIENSBACHIAN
KIMMERIDGIAN
OXFORDIAN
CALLOVIAN
BAJOCIAN
O'5m
AALE NIAN
T O A R CI A N
: ' I N E M U Rl A l . l
46
(IsDre)
d'oisans
Figure3.3 rhick,weIIr,oo,lflT1l7f;'Xr;:t'67l;aboaeBourg
However, as our studies continue, more and more concealed
breaks becomeapparent, such as the remarkable situation in the
|urassic limestonesof western Sicily, where severalstagesare
packed away into thin solution pipes in what otherwise look like
unbroken limesto.nesequences(Figure 3.2).
'continuous'
Supposewe look at some of these areasof thick
sedimentation.Look at the spectacularcliffs of the Lower Jurassic
sediment of the Dauphinois trough above Bourg d'Oisans in the
French Alps (Figure 3.3). Hundreds of metres of shales and
mudstonesrepresentone small part (and I suspectone small part
of that small part) of the Jurassic.Here, if anlrwhere,one would
think we must have had continuous sedimentation. But what
are all those bedding planes?What is any bedding plane if it is
not a mini-unconformity? If we really had continuous sedimentation then there would surely be no bedding planes at all.
In fact the only time we seeunbedded sediments, apart from
comparatively small thicknessesof in-sifu reef development, we
can almost always find evidence of the destruction of the bedding
planes by recrystallisation or by the burrowing activity of
organisms. ProfessorGilbert Kelling has pointed out to me that,
in certain circumstances,bedding planes can be produced
'continuous
by textural and diagenetic differences within
MoreGapsthanRecord 47
sedimentation'. But I still maintain that most bedding planes
show evidenceof a pausein sedimentation, if not actual erosion.
Ideally, I suppose, we should look around for the thickest
available development of a particular unit if we are to find
anything approaching continuous sedimentation.Even then it
has been calculated, taking systems as a whole, that the
maximum rate of sedimentationwould have been something like
300cm in a thousand years,
In fact we have a paradoxhere in that the areasmost commonly
cited as those of continuous sedimentation without breaks, such
as the late Ordovician-early Silurian of the Southern Uplands
of Scotland and the Jurassicto early Oligocene of the Italian
Apennines, are also those of thinnest sedimentation. Clearly,
in such developmentsthere may be few, if any, erosionalbreaks,
but there must be immensenon-depositionalbreaks. And even
in deposits such as the flysch of northern Spain or the Polish
Carpathians,there is a great deal of evidenceof erosion by the
turbidity currents that laid down the sediment.
Having a sentimental attachment for them, I cannot resist
mentioning the Cotswold Hills of western England where the
formation still quaintly known by William Smith's original name
of the 'Inferior Oolite', reacheswhat is for us the tremendous
thickness of about 30m. These are the Aalenian and Bajocian
Stagesof the Middle Jurassicand compare favourably with the
equivalent on the Dorset coastof southern England, where the
limestonesof this age are condensedinto a mere 3.4m with two
obvious breaks (Figure 3.4). But it has long been known from
careful palaeontological studies that even in the thick
development in the Cotswolds, there is evidenceof two major
breaks and a period of folding in what otherwise was a very
peacefulperiod in British geologicalhistory. What is more, if we
krok farther afield, our magnificent 30 m dwindles into
insignificance.In Alaska we read that the Middle Bajocianalone
.tmounts to more than 1200m.
Again, the childlike wonder appears when we read for
t'xampleof more than 2000m of Kimmeridgian (Upper Jurassic)
irr New Zealand or more than 3000m of Frasnian (Lower part
of the Upper Devonian)in Arctic Canada,or more than 5000m
of Arenigian(Lower Ordovician)in westernIreland.\A/hatI think
of as a few steps akrng thc beachin the Isle of Wight suffices
qartaEagiE*qxnAiar:fiu
t
|5
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Mf\DrP
AXIS
Uufi5ts.
BASIN
exF;*; 3
AXIS
GLOUCESTERSHIRE
BASIN
(a)
N.E.
MARKET WEIGHTON
AX IS
MIDLAND
BASIN
YORKSHIRE
BASIN
S.W
Mendip
oxtS
Moreton- in-Morsh
oxtS
Vole of Gloucesten
(b)
Monket Weighton
N.E.
OXIS
Leicestersh
ire
Yorkshire Bosin
50
S
CHARMOUTH
RADSTOCK
ffi*l
W!
.,,r1/ *
and
Figure3.6 Actualaaiatir" *r,fi:r;i;irf;'+ii:,nes between
theDorset
coast
56
CatastrophicStratigraphy 57
':,,".?!
..''..
'1' .
J:
. -.:,?
:-*'-
lil..::
.1::;':^:.i::i.
;9
: , ., .
'.d;gf;
. ,
,: ".. , ,e8d
I:igure 4.2 Exotic blocksin the argtlle scagliose Passo sec, Bracco in the Italian
Auennines
(DVA)
Eigure4.L LrnterCretaceous
flyschnearBielskoBialain thePolishCarpathians
I t.qltrt 1.,i
Record
58 TheNatureof the Stratigraphical
from their sourceareain the Tyrrhenian Sea(Figure4.3). More
recent work has demonstratedthat the allochthon is not quite
as confusedaswas formerly thought, and the term Argille scagliose
has been dropped in Italy (though it is still used in many other
parts of the world). The poeticname has been replacedby terms
'chaotic complex' and the pseudo-scientific
iuch as
'olistostromes'without really adding to our knowledge, but the
essentialpoint is that submarine landslipping is now thought
to be only part of the processrather than the whole. Modern
thought has reverted to earliernappe theoriesin which sizeable
slices of recognisablestratigraphy have been pushed forward
considerabledistancesfrom the south-west. At the same time
there has been extensive sliding, especiallyat the front of the
nappes. But rather than reducing the amount of such sliding,
modern ideas seem to have increased7t, fot olistostromesare
now recognisedin all parts of the succession,autochthonousas
well as allochthonous.
This examplewas worth discussingin more detail than most
type of 'catastrophic' deposit is now
becausetJneArgille scagliose
recognisedin many parts of the world, from California to Taiwan.
In Turkey, near the Chalk cliff mentioned at the beginning of
Chapter 1, there is a great jumble of Cretaceousblocks resting,
with a very irregular junction, on Eocenenummulitic marls. This
had been described as a thrust, but it is almost certainly a
submarinelandslip deposit like those in Italy. In fact, many years
ago I was rash enough to suggestthat the great Ankara m1lange
itself (humorously called by the locals tilrlil gilaec-a Turkish
type
version of Lancashirehotpot) might be an Argille scagliose
of deposit. I was duly slapped downby -y more knowledgeable
tectonic seniors, and tried to forget the brief publication in
question, but later work has now led met to suspectthat I might
have been right after all.
Certainly there are many smashed-up-lookingdeposits around
the world carrying huge exotic blocks far from their place of
origin. One of the most remarkableI have heard of is in the island
of Timor, where there is a deposit, known as Bobonaro Scaly
Clay, which extends for nearly 1000km of outcrop, is nearly
100km wide and is 2.5km thick. In fact, if its allegedoccurrence
on other islandsis correct,it extendsfor at least1600km. Figure
tt'itlr some
4.4 shows a rounded exoticpebble in this c-lt'1'xr5i1,
CatastrophicStratigraphy 59
I r,",
62
CatastrophicStratigraphy
63
that certain sedimentsin the stratigraphicalrecord can be best
interpreted in terms of violent storms. By analogy with
'turbidites' he has coined the term 'tempestites' for graded beds
of shallow water sedimentsthat may have been churned up by
storms and allowed to settle again. They differ from turbidites
in their general environmental setting and in the relative paucity
of the basal sole marks that record the erosional passageof a
turbid current. Professor Kelling used the term first for
Carboniferousdepositson the Moroccan Meseta,but I have seen
the same sort of thing in Jurassic carbonateson the Polish
foreland and they have been describedfrom many other horizons
and areas,though not previously interpreted in this way. In fact
the literature is now full of storm deposits and my students are
finding them everywhere(without any pressurefrom me). One
Figure 4.5 Supposedstorm depositsin Upper lurassic near Imouzzer-des-lda-oua ilistinct storm
Tinane, westernHigh Atlas, Morocco;eachot' the bedsreptesents
episode,with blackcarbonatebelowand paler carbonateabooe(DVA)
(ltclow)algal
of oneof theaboueunits; blacklaminateddcposits
Figure4.6 Close-up
'cleaner'sedinuttt
(nbopc);
mits, possiblyrippedup andgradedin the
frontoll''511pr,
(l)VA)
thc coinis a dirham,2.4cm across
'tcnry,stitc'irr Louer
I igure 4.7 Sultpttsed
Carboniferous
limestonenearCanfranc
:lnciur
I
irrtlrc Slturishltyrun'cs;nnglilnrlilnckfragnrcntsareseenin a palegreymatix,
tlrr ulritr cnlcitrcrnckitrg
is rtslrtlr.lJlo llrt dcripedltlocks,zphichprobablyrepresent
olltr slnllow-u,nltrnlyl rlr'|osils-llrclrnnnnrris 29cm |oug(DVA)
Stratigraphy 67
Catastrophic
times,near
in earlyOrdoaician
scenery
Figure4.8 Reconstruction
of thesupposed
of Sir WilliamPugh
Builth,Wales(fromlonesandPugh,1949,by kindpermission
Societyof London)
and the Geological
founded on observation and practical experience that did not
depend on any preconceived ideas from the Bible or elsewhere
and which provided a methodology-a means of explaining
geological phenomena.
'Methodological
uniformitarianism', as it is sometimes called,
makes the simple assumption (as in all other sciences) of the in'Substantive
uniformitarianism' on the
variance of natural laws.
other hand (towards which Lyell also inclined)presumes uniform
rates or conditions. It is this second concept which has caused all
the trouble, certainly (for example) in view of what we now know
about the very different world of early Precambrian times. But
what chiefly concerns me here is simply the amount of time
needed for what we know to have happened in the geological past
'normal
if we can only postulate
processes'. Thus the other great
tun iformitarian of the last century-Charles Darwin-estimated
verstlylonger periods than are accepted today. For example, he
postulated 300 million years since the Cretaceous to allow for
thc scooping out of thc Wealden anticline in south-eastEngland.
t ritrnrphec'lbecauseit provided a general
U rrifornrit.rri.rrrisnr
tht.ory tltat rr'.ls.rt ottt't' logit'al atrcl set'rnirrgly'scicntific'.
74
Catastrophic
Uniformitarianism75
Years ago, Arthur Holmes made an interesting calculation
dividing the present area of sea-floorby the total amount of
sediment being brought down annually by all the rivers of
the world. He estimated 8xl-0etonnes transported annually
to the sea,which works out at 0.025kg per squaremetre of the
sea-floor.If the averagedensity of the sediment is 2000kg/m3,
the averagerate works out at about 1cm per thousand years.
This is even lessthan someof the rates mentioned in Chapter 3.
It seemsto me, from a number of recent papers (and from
common sense)that the rare event is becomingmore and more
recognised as an important agent of recent sedimentation.
Papershave been written on 'the significanceof the rare event in
geology' and one must never forget the significance of the
old truism that given time, the rare event becomesa probability
and given enough time, it becomesa certainty. We certainly
have enough time in geology. A study of the 1961hurricane
'CarLa'and the 1963hurricane 'Cindy' in the southern United
States showed that they had considerably modified both the
form of the affectedcoastlineand the distribution of sediments
there. The suggestionwas that just as the energy of electrons
is discharged in discrete amounts, or quanta, so energy is
expended in near-shoresedimentary environments within short
time intervals that are separatedby long periods of relative
calm. In other words, the changesdo not take place gradually
but as sporadic bursts, as a series of minor catastrophes.
It has been calculatedthat, in the Gulf of Mexico, there is
a 95o/oprobability that a hurricane will pass over a particular
point on the coast at least once in 3000years. The maximum
amount of sediment likely to be deposited over that period
along the coast generally is about 30cm and we know that
hurricanes will certainly rearrangethat amount of material. In
other words, the rare hurricane is likely to be the main agent
recorded in the stratigraphicalcolumn of certain parts of the
world, even in our present climatic set-up.
Similarly, it has been shown that tsunamis, or 'tidal waves'
trsthey were for a long time mis-named,have an immense effect
on shorelines, both in erosion and in the shifting of great
quantitiesof sediment.To quote a recentauthor on the subject:
'. . . the actirlnof tsunamisis short and extremelyviolent . . .'.
It has bct'n suggt.stt'cltlr.rt setr-floorsediments as deep as
Record
78 TheNatureof the Stratigraphical
However, I would not wish it to be thought that this was
necessarilya unique example. Even in the same region of the
western United States there was the catastrophicbreaking of
the morainic dam of 'Lake Bonneville' (ancestorof the Great
Salt Lake) about 30 000years ago. This flooded the wide Snake
River Plateau in Idaho with similar effects. Around the world
generally one finds similar examples, albeit on less than an
American scale, and there are probably many more not yet
known in the world's literature. One reads of 52m of debris
being depositedin an hour as the result of a cloud-burst. One
sees huge deposits, such as the high cliffs of gravel around
Embrun in the French Alps, and not far away, the heap of great
boulders at Claps de Luc, where half a mountain fell into the
valley of the Dr6me one wet afternoon inL442 (Figure5.2). The
largest landslide of all in the Alps, that of Flims in Switzerland,
is calculatedto have brought down a mass of more than 1,2km3
of material. We know, therefore, that the frequency of landslides
is quite enough to account for a major part of the wearing down
of new mountain chains.
Particularly disastrous, but not uncommon, have been the
effectsof landslips and rock-fallsinto bodies of water. In L958,
t
landslipat Claps de Luc (Driurrr) itr lltt I'rt:ttcl
Figure 5.2 Fifteenth-century
Altts(DVA)
Catastrophic
Uniformitarianism79
40 million cubic meters of rock fell into Lituya Bay on the coast
of Alaska, producing a great surge which destroyed a forest
and reached more than 500m up the mountainside on the far
side of the bay. In1792, a similar rock-fallinto ShimbaraBay,
on the |apaneseisland of Kyushu, causedthree surges which
drowned 15000 people. The most spectacularknown to me
in Europe were the great rock-falls that occurred from the
sheer face of Ramnefjell (Raven Mountain) into Loenfjord in
central Norway in 1905and1936, producing waves that wiped
out local communities and carried a steamer a considerable
distanceinland.
Most countries of the world have their records of great natural
catastropheswhich changed the local face of the earth. One
thinks of the change in the course of the Hwang-ho River
in China, which in less than 80 years moved its mouth some
400km from way to the south of Shantung on the Yellow
Sea up nearly to Tientsin on the Gulf of Pohai. The Brazos
River in Texas is said to change its course abruptly once every
10 years or so.
Alec Smith has told me of his studies on the bottom sediment
of Lake Windermere in north-west England. The rush of visitors
to the area since the popular romanticism of the 'Lakeland
poets' has led to major changes in the micro-organismsand
the deposition of their remains, due largely to the effects of
human effluent. He has therefore aptly calledthe higher layers
the 'post-Wordsworthian'.This shows how rapidly a new fauna
and/or flora can migrate into an area and change the record
albeit on a very small scale.
Volcaniceffectshave been even more sudden and disastrous,
ranging from the explosion of the island of Krakatoa, between
java and Sumatra, in 1883to the even more catastrophiceruption
of Santorini (or Thira) in the Aegaean about 1470 BC. This
eruption, or series of eruptions, which resulted in the huge
collapsed caldera in the sea beside the present island, must
have been the greatestcatastropheever witnessedby man and
may well have been heard as far away as Britain. The whole
cruption probably lastedonly about 100days, but was probably
indirectlyresponsiblefor the destructionof the Minoan civilisation on Crete,nearly l(X)kmaway. This seemedto fit in well
with I)l.rto's.'rccour'rl
of tht' t.ntl of Atlirntis.The correlation
Record
80 TheNatureof the Stratigraphical
of the eruption and the destructionwas long disputed, but now
seemsto be confirmed. Neverthelessvolcanicbombs were hurled
this distance comPared with a mere 40km from the more
publicised Krakatoa eruption. It is, however, still very easy
io pick up tufa from the latter on the coast of eastern Africa,
to which-it took 6 months to float acrossthe Indian Ocean'
one of the most spectacularsightsever seenby man must have
been the mile-higi (1.6km) fiery cascadewhen a lava flow
poured into the Grand Canyon in Arizona. Earlier lava flows,
Lefore the coming of man, date back a million years, but since
that time the Colorado River has only cut down about 15m'
The canyon itself, more than \lzkm deep, cannot have started
more than 1,0million years ago, so here too there must have
been some very rapid erosion at some time.
So we come bacl again and again to the notion of the rare
catastrophichappenings playing a major role in the working
out of the stratigraphic record as we find it today. Examples
of this sort are in direct contrast to what has been, in effect,
the subconsciousattitude of most geologistsfor the last 100 or
more years.The opposing attitude was perhapsbe-stexpressed
by the great Frenih naturalist, the Comte de Buffon, back in
the eighteenthcentury.In 1781,he wrote:
We ought not to be affected by causes which seldom act, and whose
action i6 always sudden and vioient. Thesehave no placein the ordinary
course of naiure. But operations uniformly repeated, motions- which
succeedone another without interruption, are the causeswhich alone
ought to be the foundation of our reasoning.
Catastrophic
Uniformitaianism 81
his list of examples as follows, ranging from biological to
astronomicalprocesses:
Continuous
Phyletic gradualism
Erosion by a meandering river
Compaction of sediments
Reef growth
Subsidence
Diapirism
Uplift
Pelagicdeposition
Heat flow
Sea-floorspreading
Magnetic field
Cosmic rays
Discontinuous
Punctuated equilibria
Flash flood
Internal collapse of sediments
Storm beach
Landslip
Faulting
Earthquake
Turbidity currents
Intrusions
Continental collision
Magnetic reversal
Meteoritic impact
Regular events
Common events
Ilecurrent events
()ccasionalevents
I{are events
Peiodicity in years
102,i.e. once in a human lifetime
L03,i.e. once in human history
1,06.i.e. once in the smallest
stratigraphical unit
L08,i.b. once in an era
10e.i.e. once in the historv of the earth
CatastrophicUniformitarianism 83
88
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