Climatic, Tectonic, and Biotic Evolution in Continental Cores: Colorado Plateau Coring Project Workshop; St. George, Utah, 13–16 November 2007
Olsen
Paul E.
author
Columbia University. Earth and Environmental Sciences
Kent
Dennis V.
author
Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Geissman
John W.
author
Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
originator
text
Articles
2008
English
A workshop was convened in St. George, Utah, to advance planning for the Colorado Plateau Coring Project (CPCP). The vast continental basins of the southwestern United States, particularly well exposed on the Colorado Plateau and its environs, contain one of the richest stratigraphic records of early Mesozoic age (between roughly 145 and 250 million years ago). This time period was punctuated by two of the major mass extinctions in the past 550 million years and witnessed the evolutionary appearance of the modern biota and dramatic climate changes on the continents. Since the mid-nineteenth century, classic studies of these basins, their strata, and their fossils have made this sequence instrumental in framing our context for the early Mesozoic world. Nonetheless, striking ambiguities in temporal resolution, uncertainties in global correlations with other early Mesozoic strata, and major doubts about latitudinal position still hamper testing of the major competing climatic, biotic, and tectonic hypotheses.
Geophysics
Eos
89
12
118
119
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2008EO120003
2008-03-18
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:12004
NNC
NNC
2011-12-15 14:32:53 -0500
2012-11-28 13:35:54 -0500
5993
eng