Short description: Third age of the early Cretaceous
Hauterivian
~132.6 – ~125.77 Ma
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Chronology
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Tithonian
Berriasian
Valanginian
Hauterivian
Barremian
Aptian
Albian
Cenoman.
Turonian
Coniacian
Santonian
Campanian
Maastricht.
90%;>Danian
←
K-Pg mass extinction
Subdivision of the Cretaceous according to the ICS, as of 2021.[1] Vertical axis scale: millions of years ago.
Etymology
Name formality
Formal
Usage information
Celestial body
Earth
Regional usage
Global (ICS)
Time scale(s) used
ICS Time Scale
Definition
Chronological unit
Age
Stratigraphic unit
Stage
Time span formality
Formal
Lower boundary definition
FAD of the Ammonite genus Acanthodiscus
Lower boundary GSSP
La Charce, Drôme, France Template:Coor
GSSP ratified
December 2019[2]
Upper boundary definition
Not formally defined
Upper boundary definition candidates
FAD of the Spitidiscus hugii-Spitidiscus vandeckii Ammonite group
Upper boundary GSSP candidate section(s)
Río Argos, Caravaca de la Cruz, Murcia Province, Spain
The Hauterivian is, in the geologic timescale, an age in the Early Cretaceous Epoch or a stage in the Lower Cretaceous Series. It spans the time between 132.6 ± 2 Ma and 125.77 (million years ago). The Hauterivian is preceded by the Valanginian and succeeded by the Barremian.[3]
Contents
1Stratigraphic definitions
2Climate
3References
3.1Notes
3.2Literature
4External links
Stratigraphic definitions
The Hauterivian was introduced in scientific literature by Switzerland geologist Eugène Renevier in 1873. It is named after the Swiss town of Hauterive at the shore of Lake Neuchâtel.
The base of the Hauterivian is defined as the place in the stratigraphic column where the ammonite genus Acanthodiscus first appears. A reference profile for the base (a GSSP) was officially ratified by the International Union of Geological Sciences in December of 2019, and is placed in La Charce, France .[2] The top of the Hauterivian (the base of the Barremian) is at the first appearance of ammonite species Spitidiscus hugii.
In the ammonite biostratigraphy of the Tethys domain, the Hauterivian contains seven ammonite biozones:
zone of Pseudothurmannia ohmi
zone of Balearites balearis
zone of Plesiospitidiscus ligatus
zone of Subsaynella sayni
zone of Lyticoceras nodosoplicatus
zone of Crioceratites loryi
zone of Acanthodiscus radiatus
Climate
Some palaeoclimatological studies indicate that a brief ice age, known as the Hauterivian cold snap, occurred during this age. The Hauterivian cold snap appears to be associated with permafrost at high elevations and large ice sheets that potentially stretched as far south as the modern Iberian Peninsula, based on the existence of Hauterivian ice-rafted dropstones in Iberia. Cold conditions are also known to have existed in the Southern Hemisphere during the same time period, based on records from Australia . Similar cold periods with associated glaciations are also known from the earlier Valanginian and the later Aptian & early Albian periods, all contrasting with the typical image of the Cretaceous as a greenhouse period.[4][5][6][7]
↑ 2.02.1Mutterlose, Jörg; Rawson, Peter; Reboulet, Stéphane; Baudin, François; Bulot, Luc; Emmanuel, Laurent; Gardin, Silvia; Martinez, Mathieu et al. (September 2020). "The Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) for the base of the Hauterivian Stage (Lower Cretaceous), La Charce, southeast France". Episodes44 (2): 129–150. doi:10.18814/epiiugs/2020/020072. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/344031297. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
↑See Gradstein et al. (2004) for a detailed geologic timescale
↑Rodríguez-López, Juan Pedro; Wu, Chihua; Vishnivetskaya, Tatiana A.; Murton, Julian B.; Tang, Wenqiang; Ma, Chao (2022-12-26). "Permafrost in the Cretaceous supergreenhouse" (in en). Nature Communications13 (1): 7946. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-35676-6. ISSN 2041-1723. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-35676-6.
↑Rodríguez-López, Juan Pedro; Liesa, Carlos L.; Luzón, Aránzazu; Muñoz, Arsenio; Mayayo, María J.; Murton, Julian B.; Soria, Ana R. (2023-10-10). "Ice-rafted dropstones at midlatitudes in the Cretaceous of continental Iberia". Geology. doi:10.1130/g51725.1. ISSN 0091-7613. https://doi.org/10.1130/G51725.1.
↑Grasby, Stephen E.; McCune, Gennyne E.; Beauchamp, Benoit; Galloway, Jennifer M. (2017-02-10). "Lower Cretaceous cold snaps led to widespread glendonite occurrences in the Sverdrup Basin, Canadian High Arctic". Geological Society of America Bulletin129 (7-8): 771–787. doi:10.1130/b31600.1. ISSN 0016-7606. https://doi.org/10.1130/B31600.1.
↑Alley, N. F.; Hore, S. B.; Frakes, L. A. (2020-11-16). "Glaciations at high-latitude Southern Australia during the Early Cretaceous" (in en). Australian Journal of Earth Sciences67 (8): 1045–1095. doi:10.1080/08120099.2019.1590457. ISSN 0812-0099. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08120099.2019.1590457.
Literature
Gradstein, F.M.; Ogg, J.G. & Smith, A.G.; (2004): A Geologic Time Scale 2004, Cambridge University Press .
External links
GeoWhen Database - Hauterivian
Mid-Cretaceous timescale, at the website of the subcommission for stratigraphic information of the ICS
Stratigraphic chart of the Lower Cretaceous, at the website of Norges Network of offshore records of geology and stratigraphy
Hauterivian Microfossils: 25+ images of Foraminifera
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Geological history of Earth
Cenozoic era (present–66.0 Mya)
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Proterozoic eon (541.0 Mya–2.5 Gya)
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Eras
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Hadean eon (4–4.6 Gya)
kya = thousands years ago. Mya = millions years ago. Gya = billions years ago.
See also: Geologic time scale
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