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Walking
Through Time
by
Stephen Marshak
The discovery of the geologic time scale adds a new dimension to
hiking in the national parks of the south-western United States.
By correlating strata from the Grand Canyon region with strata from
the Painted Desert, Petrified Forest, Bryce Canyon, and Zion Canyon
National Parks, geologists have constructed a stratigraphic column
that represents a partial record of Earth history beginning in the
Proterozoic era and continuing into the Eocene epoch. These rocks
have been exposed by erosion that began about 10 million years ago
when a large block of land, encompassing parts of Arizona, New Mexico,
Colorado, and Utah uplifted to form a broad highland called Colorado
Plateau.
When you walk down the trail from the Grand Canyon’s rim to the
river on the canyon floor, you walk through a 1.5-km-thick column
of strata. Geologists have subdivided the strata into several geological
formations, and have interpreted the environment in which each formation
developed by looking at their rock types, fossils, and sedimentary
structures. By the principle of superposition, we know that the youngest
rocks in the canyon occur at the rim, while the oldest rocks are
found at the base, so walking down the trail from the rim to the
river is like walking back in time.
At
the rim of the canyon, you stand on the Kaibab Limestone, remnants
of ancient reefs deposited 250 million years ago when the region
was not the high plateau it is today by a balmy, shallow sea, much
like the one surrounding the modern Bahamas. Along the trail, you
cross the cliff-forming CocoNiño Sandstone, which contains
gigantic cross beds that formed in desert sand dunes. Large reptiles
plodded across these dunes 270 million years ago,leaving footprints
in the loose sand that we can see today, preserved as fossils in
solid rock. Beneath the dunes, the rocks record a wide floodplain
on which rivers deposited mud and silt, littered with fragments of
ferns. These deposits compromise the 280-million-year-old Hermit
Shale and the 300-million-year-old Supai Formation. Beneath the Supai,
you enter the 350-million-year-old Redwall Limestone, deposited when
the sea flooded the region. Farther down the trail, beds of 500-million-year-old
Temple Butte Limestone (containing fossils of strange armored fish)
and Bright Angel Shale (containing fossils of trilobites and other
shelled invertebrates) crop out. On the shelf overlooking the inner
gorge, you stand on the Tapeats Sandstone, which includes the deposits
of 505-million-year-old beaches.
So far, all the beds we have crossed roughly horizontal. Along
the lip of the inner gorge, we find more sedimentary rocks, called
the Unkar Group (a group consists of several formations lumped
together). These beds tilt at about 20-30, and they contain no fossils
of shelled organisms, only the vague imprints of soft-bodied invertebrates.
Based on correlation with similar units elsewhere, these rock layers
probably represent deposition in an 800-million-year-old rift. Underneath
lie black schists (the Vishnu Schist) and pink granite (the Zoroaster
Granite), metamorphic and igneous rocks that contain no fossils at
all, but have yielded radiometric dates of about 1.6 billion years.
The existence of these rocks means that a volcanic mountain range
once existed at the site of the Grand Canyon; rocks were buried deeply
and metamorphosed, then were intruded by large volumes of magma beneath
this range. Later, many kilometers of rock were removed, exposing
the Visnu Schist at the surface.
Is the record of Earth history visible on the walls of the Grand
Canyon complete? No. The nonconformity between the Vishnu Schist
and the Unkar Group represents about 800 million years of missing
time, while the angular unconformity between the Unkar Group and
the Tapeats Sandstone represents almost 300 million years. In fact,
the column of flat-lying rocks above the Unkar Group records less
than 25% of time between the end of the Precambrian time and the
beginning of the Mesozoic era. Further major disconformities occur
at the base of the Redwall and the base of the Supai.
The strata that once lay directly above the Kaibab Limestone have
been eroded from the Grand Canyon but still crop out in the Painted
Desert and the Petrified Forest, 150 km to the east. These strata
appear as vivid stripes of red, cream, gray, and green shale across
the desert. They contain the petrified remains of 60-m-high conifer
trees and the footprints of early (220-million-year-old) dinosaurs.
Cross-bedded sandstones, remnants of giant dune fields that, 200
million years ago, made the region look like a huge Sahara Desert,
comprise the Navajo Sandstone, which now form the spectacular white
and orange cliffs of Zion Canyon. Above the sandstone, a several-kilometer-thick
layer of gray shale records the time between 130 million and 70 million
years ago when a shallow sea stretched across the interior of North
America from the Arctic to the Gulf of Mexico. This shale contains
abundant fossil shells, including the cone-shaped shell of the nautilus,
a squid-like creature. Still younger sandstones and shale form the
muticolored walls of Bryce Canyon and Cedar Breaks National Parks.
These strata were deposited in a huge lake between 80 million and
40 million years ago.
What did we learn on our journey through time? Conditions we find
at a particular location today were not necessarily the same throughout
Earth history. The high and dry region of the Grand Canyon today
was sometimes a shallow sea, sometimes a river floodplain, sometimes
a sandy desert, and sometimes a rugged mountain range. Such changes
reflect the activity of plate tectonics, the global rise and fall
of the sea level and climate changes. And while all these changes
take place on the Earth's surface, life forms evolve.
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