Eonothem
In
Technically, a complete geologic record doesn't occur anywhere. For such a record to develop would require the area to have been receiving sedimentary deposits continually ever since the origin of the earth. Nowhere is such a situation known to exist. If it did exist, we could not effectively look at the strata because they would still be buried, and modern strata would continue to be deposited on top of them. The earth's surface has been far too dynamic to allow that to occur anywhere. No area has been in such a static condition throughout the earth's long history. Areas that have had sediment deposited on them at one time are later uplifted and eroded. In some places this has occurred many times. There is ample evidence to prove such a sequence of events.[1]
Eonothems, despite discontinuities (locally missing strata or unconformities), can be compared to others where the rock record is more complete and, by correlation of points of correspondence, be fixed appropriately within the eon. They are therefore useful as broad chronostratigraphic units, specifying approximate age within the timelines within the rock column.
Eonothems are subdivided into erathems and their smaller subdivisions within geology and paleobiology and their sub-fields, and a whole system of cross-disciplinary classification by strata is in place with oversight by the International Commission on Stratigraphy.
Eonothems are not often used in practice as expert dating estimates can be and usually are specified into the more refined timelines of smaller chronostratigraphic units, which can be subdivided in turn down to the many defined
Dating standards
For more recent periods, a
Etymology
Eonothem derives from eon, “age”, a Latin transliteration from the koine Greek word ὁ αἰών (ho aion) from the archaic αἰϝών (aiwon), and thema, "that which is placed or laid down", "subject of a discourse".[2]
See also
Multidiscipline comparison
Segments of rock (strata) in chronostratigraphy | Time spans in geochronology | Notes to geochronological units |
---|---|---|
Eonothem | Eon | 4 total, half a billion years or more |
Erathem | Era | 10 defined, several hundred million years |
System | Period | 22 defined, tens to ~one hundred million years |
Series | Epoch | 34 defined, tens of millions of years |
Stage | Age | 99 defined, millions of years |
Chronozone | Chron |
subdivision of an age, not used by the ICS timescale |
Related other topics
- Body form
- Fauna (animals)
- Type locality
Notes
- Worldwide Church of God. "An Overview of the Geologic Record". Retrieved 2008-06-21.)
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link - ISBN 978-90-6266-305-7. Archived from the originalon 2017-11-17. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
- ^ Cohen, K.M.; Finney, S.; Gibbard, P.L. (2015), International Chronostratigraphic Chart (PDF), International Commission on Stratigraphy.
References
- Hedberg, H.D., (editor), International stratigraphic guide: A guide to stratigraphic classification, terminology, and procedure, New York, John Wiley and Sons, 1976
- International Stratigraphic Chart from the International Commission on Stratigraphy
- USA National Park Service
- Washington State University Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine
- Web Geological Time Machine
- Eon or Aeon, Math Words - An alphabetical index