Asselian
Asselian | |||||||
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Chronology | |||||||
In the million years ago (Ma). It was preceded by the Gzhelian (the latest or uppermost subdivision in the Carboniferous) and followed by the Sakmarian .
StratigraphyThe Asselian Stage was introduced into scientific literature in 1954, when the Russian stratigrapher V.E. Ruzhenchev split it off from the Artinskian. At the time, the Artinskian still encompassed most of the lower Permian – its current definitions are more restricted. The Asselian is named after the Assel River in the southern Ural Mountains of Kazakhstan and Bashkortostan.[4] The base of the Asselian Stage is equivalent to the base of the Cisuralian Series and the Permian Aqtöbe in the Ural Mountains of Kazakhstan.[5] Other reference species which approximate the base of the Asselian include Streptognathodus invaginatus and Str. nodulinearis (conodonts) and Sphaeroschwagerina vulgaris and Sph. fusiformis (fusilinids).[5]
The top of the Asselian stage (the base of the Sakmarian stage) is at the first appearance of conodont species Mesogondolella monstra. Asselian biostratigraphy is mostly defined by the evolution of Streptognathodus. There is some debate over the exact sequence of species; one option, according to Henderson (2018),[6] lists the following biozones, from youngest to oldest:
Regional equivalentsIn North America, the regional equivalent of the Asselian is the Nealian stage. The Nealian (lower Wolfcampian) is named after the Neal Ranch Formation in the Glass Mountains of west Texas.[7][8] In South China, the Asselian is equivalent to at least the lower part of the regional Zisongian stage of the Chuanshanian Series.[9][10] Both the Nealian and Zisongian are defined by fusilinid assemblages, so their precise correlation to the conodont-based global timescale is uncertain.
The Asselian occupies a portion of major terrestrial sediment units in Europe, namely the Autunian series of France and the lower Rotliegend of Germany.[11][12][13] Notable formations
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