THE ROLE OF CLIMATE IN STRATIGRAPHIC PATTERNS EXHIBITED BY LATE PALEOZOIC ROCKS EXPOSED IN KANSAS

Citation
Rr. West et al., THE ROLE OF CLIMATE IN STRATIGRAPHIC PATTERNS EXHIBITED BY LATE PALEOZOIC ROCKS EXPOSED IN KANSAS, Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 128(1-4), 1997, pp. 1-16
Citations number
60
Categorie Soggetti
Paleontology
ISSN journal
00310182
Volume
128
Issue
1-4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1 - 16
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-0182(1997)128:1-4<1:TROCIS>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Late Palaeozoic ''cyclothems'' of the midcontinental U.S. cannot be re presented by a single ideal facies sequence. Rather, they encompass a wide range of cycle types depending on their stratigraphic position. T he exposed Late Palaeozoic (Pennsylvanian and Permian) rocks of Kansas , as compiled by Zeller (1968), can be divided into nine major lithofa cies. These lithofacies were ordered based on their times of greatest abundance through the section. From oldest to youngest, they attain th eir peak abundance in the following order: (1) coal; (2) gray mudrocks and sandstones; (3) black mudrocks; (4) limestones; (5) cherty limest ones; (6) fossiliferous mudrocks; (7) variegated mudrocks; (8) evapori tes; and (9) variegated dolomitic siliciclastics. Climatically, these nine lithofacies suggest a change from generally wetter, at the base, to generally drier, at the top of the section. This climatic trend was probably generated by a complex interaction of factors primarily driv en by global tectonics. Climatic changes can be used to explain the fi ve generally recognized types of lithofacies ''cyclothems'' in Kansas, and thus are a potential explanation for the changing stratigraphic p atterns of the entire Late Palaeozoic time interval of Kansas, and per haps elsewhere.