Vai al contenuto

File:Tillite (Elatina Formation, Neoproterozoic; Enorama Creek section, Flinders Ranges, South Australia) 17.jpg

Contenuti della pagina non supportati in altre lingue.
Wikibooks, manuali e libri di testo liberi.

File originale (3 008 × 2 000 pixel, dimensione del file: 5,35 MB, tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Dettagli

Descrizione
English: Tillite in the Precambrian of South Australia.

Tillite is a lithified till, a poorly-sorted, coarse-grained, non-bedded glacial deposit. Tills form as either continental glaciers or alpine glaciers advance and retreat. The glacial debris seen here was reworked by fluvial action, so they are actually glaciofluvial deposits.

This reddish tillite is part of South Australia's Elatina Formation and formed about 640 million years ago, during the Marinoan Glaciation. The Marinoan was one of two or three global or near-global ice ages called "Snowball Earth Glaciations". Laterally, along strike, the Elatina Formation has tidalites (see elsewhere in this photo album), which only form at sea level. Paleomagnetic analysis shows that this area was within 5° of latitude of the paleoequator. In other words, glaciers were present at sea level at the equator. That can only happen during an extreme ice age. Stratigraphic evidence from sites around the globe also indicate a widespread ice age.

Snowball Earth events were the most significant ice ages ever. The most extreme models describing Snowball Earth have glacial ice completely covering all continents and all oceans, even at the equator. Some models, called “Slushball Earth”, have Earth’s equatorial oceanic areas not completely frozen over. Each Snowball Earth Glaciation was followed by a super-greenhouse climate. The resulting sedimentary record of these “freeze-fry” events typically consists of glacial tillites and overlying cap carbonates. These units are preserved at many localities on Earth, including the section seen here.

In this area, the reddish tillite unit is about 300 meters thick and has an conformably-overlying cap carbonate. The tillite has clasts with glacial striations.

Stratigraphy: Elatina Formation, Marinoan, ~uppermost Cryogenian, top of the middle Neoproterozoic

Locality: outcrop along Enorama Creek, Brachina Gorge Geologic Trail, Flinders Ranges National Park, South Australia (vicinity of 31° 19.892’ South latitude, 138° 38.001’ East longitude)


See info. at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marinoan_glaciation and

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowball_Earth
Data
Fonte https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/50813115696/
Autore James St. John

Licenza

w:it:Creative Commons
attribuzione
Questo file è disponibile in base alla licenza Creative Commons Attribuzione 2.0 Generico
Tu sei libero:
  • di condividere – di copiare, distribuire e trasmettere quest'opera
  • di modificare – di adattare l'opera
Alle seguenti condizioni:
  • attribuzione – Devi fornire i crediti appropriati, un collegamento alla licenza e indicare se sono state apportate modifiche. Puoi farlo in qualsiasi modo ragionevole, ma non in alcun modo che suggerisca che il licenziante approvi te o il tuo uso.
Questa immagine è stata originariamente caricata su Flickr da James St. John all'indirizzo https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/50813115696. È stata controllata in data 8 gennaio 2021 dal robot FlickreviewR 2 ed è stato confermato il suo rilascio sotto i termini della licenza cc-by-2.0.

8 gennaio 2021

Didascalie

Aggiungi una brevissima spiegazione di ciò che questo file rappresenta

Elementi ritratti in questo file

raffigura

70 millimetro

Cronologia del file

Fare clic su un gruppo data/ora per vedere il file come si presentava nel momento indicato.

Data/OraMiniaturaDimensioniUtenteCommento
attuale17:47, 8 gen 2021Miniatura della versione delle 17:47, 8 gen 20213 008 × 2 000 (5,35 MB)Ser Amantio di NicolaoUploaded a work by James St. John from https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/50813115696/ with UploadWizard

Utilizzo globale del file

Anche i seguenti wiki usano questo file:

Metadati