Online Encyclopedia

MUSCHELKALK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 44 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MUSCHELKALK  , in

geology, the
See also:
middle member of the German Trias . It consists of a series of calcareous, marly and dolomitic beds which lie conformably between the
See also:
Bunter and
See also:
Keuper formations . The name Muschelkalk (Fr., calcaire coquillier; conchylien, formation of D'Orbigny) indicates a characteristic feature in this series, viz. the frequent occurrence of lenticular banks composed of fossil shells, remarkable in the midst of a singularly barren
See also:
group . In its typical form the Muschelkalk is practically restricted to the German region and its immediate neighbourhood; it is found in Thuringia, Harz, Franconia, Hesse, Swabia, and the
See also:
Saar and Alsace districts . Northward it extends into
See also:
Silesia, Poland and Heligoland . Representatives are found in the
See also:
Alps, west and south of the Vosges, in Moravia, near
See also:
Toulon and
See also:
Montpellier, in Spain and Sardinia; in Rumania, Bosnia, Dalmatia, and beyond this into
See also:
Asia in the Himalayas,
See also:
China,
See also:
Australia, California, and in North Africa (
See also:
Constantine) . From the nature of the deposits, as well as from the impoverished
See also:
fauna, the Muschelkalk of the type
See also:
area was probably laid down within a
See also:
land-locked sea which, in the earlier portion of its existence, had only imperfect communications with the more open waters of the period . The more remote representatives of the formation were of course deposited in diverse conditions, and are only to be correlated through the presence of some of the Muschelkalk fossils . In the " German " area the Muschelkalk is from 250-350 ft. thick;' it is readily divisible into three groups, of which the upper and
See also:
lower are pale thin-bedded limestones with greenish-grey marls, the middle group being ° mainly composed of gypsiferous and saliniferous marls with
See also:
dolomite . The Lower Muschelkalk consists, from below upwards, of the following rocks, the ochreous Wellen Dolomit, lower Wellen
See also:
Kalk, upper Wellen Kalk (so called on account of the wavy character of the bedding) with beds of " Schaumkalk " (a porous cellular lime-stone), and Oolite and the
See also:
Orbicularis beds (with Myophoria orbicularis) . In the Saar and Alsace districts and north
See also:
Eifel, these beds take on a sandy aspect, the " Muschelsandstein." The Middle Muschelkalk or
See also:
Anhydrite group, as already indicated, consists mainly of marls and dolomites with beds of anhydrite,
See also:
gypsum and salt . The salt beds are worked at Hall, Friedrichshall,
See also:
Heilbronn,
See also:
Stettin and
See also:
Erfurt .

It is from this

division that many of the
See also:
mineral springs of Thuringia and south Germany obtain their saline contents . The cellular nature of much of the dolomite has given rise to the
See also:
term " Zellendolomit." The Upper Muschelkalk (Hauptmuschelkalk, Friedrichshallkalk of von Alberti) consists of
See also:
regular beds of Shelly
See also:
limestone alternating with beds of marl . The lower portion or " Trochitenkalk " is often composed entirely of the fragmentary stems of Encrinus liliiformis; higher up come the " Nodosus " beds with Ceratites compressus, C. nodosus, and C. semipartitus in ascending order . In Swabia and Franconia the highest beds are platy dolomites with Tringonodus Sandergensis and the crustacean Bairdia . Stylolites are
See also:
common in all the Muschelkalk limestones .

End of Article: MUSCHELKALK
[back]
MUSCATINE
[next]
MUSCLE AND NERVE (Physiology))

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.