Black shales and other sediments with high organic matter contents in Phanerozoic climatic cycles: Communication 2. Black shales during the Pangea existence


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Abstract

According to recent concepts, the Earth surface was permanently transformed during its geological history. Some stages of its evolution were marked by the convergence of separate continental blocks to result in the formation of supercontinents, which resisted successfully centrifugal processes. Other stages were characterized by the opposite tendency: after their long existence, the supercontinents became disintegrated into several large and small blacks, the motion of which was accompanied by opening of new sea basins and closure of former basins with the oceanic crust. The second half of the Paleozoic was marked by amalgamation of large continental blocks. In the Devonian, collision between Laurentia and Baltica culminated in the formation of the Euroamerica continent. After the closure of the Ural paleocean in the terminal Carboniferous–initial Permian, it was united with the Siberian and Kazakhstan continental blocks. These events provided the prerequisites for the formation of a new supercontinent (Pangea), which acquired its final configuration at the end of the Permian. One of its segments located mainly south of the equator included Gondwana. Another segment located northward included Euroamerica, Kazakhstan, Siberian, and two China continental blocks. During its geological history, Pangea suffered many dramatic events including several extinctions of organisms. The most significant event took place in the terminal Permian–initial Triassic and at the transition between the Triassic and Jurassic periods.

About the authors

A. I. Konyukhov

Faculty of Geology

Author for correspondence.
Email: konyukhov@geol.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991


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