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PERMIAN

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 178 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PERMIAN  , in

geology, the youngest and uppermost
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system of strata of the Palaeozoic series, situated above the Carboniferous and below the Trias . The
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term " Permian " (derived from the A( ... A d . 1.,y...1u uy t.rwlui..0 ~L Mw •~• e . L'•. see ..
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Russian province of
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Perm, where the rocks are extensively
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developed) was introduced in 1841 by
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Sir R . I . Murchison . In England the series of red sandstones, conglomerates, breccias and marls which overlie the
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Coal
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Measures were at one time grouped together in one
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great formation as the " New Red
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Sandstone," in contradistinction to the Old Red Sandstone below the Carboniferous: they were likewise known as the Poikilitic series (from Gr. aoix0sos, mottled) from their mottled or variegated colour . They are now divided into two systems or groups of formations; the
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lower portion being included in the Palaeozoic series under the name Permian, the upper portion being relegated to the Mesozoic series and termed Trias . In Germany the name Dyas was proposed by J . Marcou for the rocks of this age on account of the twofold nature of the series in Thuringia, Saxony, &c .

The intimate stratigraphical relation-

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ship that exists in many quarters between the Permian rocks and the Carboniferous beds, and the
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practical difficulties in the way of
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drawing a satisfactory
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base-
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line to the system, have led to the adoption of the term Permo-carboniferous in South Africa,
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southern
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Asia,
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America,
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Australia and Russia, for strata upon this horizon: C . W. von Gumbel used "
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Post-carbon " in this sense . In a similar manner Permo-triassic has been employed in cases where a stratigraphical passage from rocks with Permian fossils to others bearing a Triassic
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fauna is apparent . The Permian system in England consists of the following subdivisions:- W. of England . E. of England . 600 ft . 50-100 ft . zone disappears, and we have a great accumulation of red, arenaceous and gravelly rocks . The lower subdivision attains its greatest development in the vale of the Eden, where it consists of brick-red sandstones, the
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Penrith sandstone series, with some beds of calcareous conglomerate or
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breccia, locally known as " brockram," derived from the waste of the Carboniferous
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Limestone . These red rocks extend across the Solway into the valleys of the Nith and
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Annan, in the south of Scotland, where they lie unconformably on the Lower
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Silurian rocks . Their breccias consist of fragments of the adjacent Silurian greywackes and shales, but near Dumfries some calcareous breccias or " brockrams " occur . These brecciated masses have evidently accumulated in small lakes or narrow fiords .

Much farther south, in

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Staffordshire, and in the districts of the Clent and Abberley Hills, the brecciated conglomerates in the Permian series attain a thickness of 400 ft . They have been shown by Sir A . C . Ramsay to consist in large measure of volcanic rocks, grits, slates and lime-stones, which can be identified with rocks on the
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borders of Wales . Some of the stones are 3 ft. in diameter and show distinct striation . The same writer pointed out that these Permian drift-beds cannot be distinguished by any essential character from
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modern glacial drifts; on the other hand, W . W . King and others have opposed this view . The
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middle subdivision is the chief repository of fossils in the Permian system . Its strata are not red, but consist of a lower zone of hard brown shale with occasional thin limestone bands (Marl Slate) and an upper thick mass of
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dolomite (Magnesian Limestone) . The latter is the chief feature in the Permian development of the east of England . It corresponds with the Zechstein of Germany, as the Marl Slate does with the Kupfer-schiefer .

It is a very variable

rock in its lithological characters, being sometimes dull, earthy,
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fine-grained and fossiliferous, in other places quite crystalline, and composed of globular, reniform, botryoidal, or other irregular concretions of crystalline and frequently internally radiated dolomite . Though the Magnesian Limestone runs as a thick persistent zone down the east of England, it is represented on the
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Lancashire and
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Cheshire side by bright red and variegated sandstone covered by a thin
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group of red marls, with numerous thin courses of limestone, containing Schizodus, Bakevellia and other characteristic fossils of the Magnesian Limestone . Concerning the rocks classed as Permian in the central counties of England there exists some doubt, for
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recent
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work tends to show that the lower parts are clearly related to the Carboniferous rocks by their fossils; while there is little evidence to warrant the exclusion of the higher beds from the Trias . Similarly in south Devon, where red sandstones and coarse breccias are well exposed, it has been found difficult to say whether the series should be regarded as Triassic or Permian, though the prevailing tendency is to retain them in the latter system . The " Dyas " type of the system is found in enormous masses of strata flanking the Harz Mountains, and also in the Rhine provinces, Saxony, Thuringia, Bavaria and Bohemia . In general terms it may be said that in this region there is a lower sandy and conglomeratic subdivision with an upper one more calcareous; the former is known as the Rothliegende, the latter as the Zechstein group . On the south side of the Harz Mountains the following subdivisions are recognized: Permian Period Hypothetical distribution of
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Land &Sea Land aria: Sea and Lagoons/ areas duel, sown 3 Upper Red sandstones, clays, and
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gypsum 2 . Middle .. Magnesian limestone . Marl slate r Red and variegated sandstone Reddish-brown and
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purple sandstones and marls, with calcareous conglomerates and breccias of volcanic rocks J From the thicknesses here given it is evident that the Permian rocks have a very different development on the two sides of England . On the east side, from the coast of Northumberland southwards to the plains of the Trent, they consist chiefly of a great central mass of limestone . But on the west side of the Pennine Chain, and extending southwards into the central counties, the calcareous 1 .

Lower .. 10-30 " 600 " 3000 " 100-250 "

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Anhydrite, gypsum, rock-salt, dolomite, marl, fetid shale and limestone . The amorphous gypsum is the chief member of this group; the limestone is some-times full of
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bitumen . Dolomite (Haupt-dolomit), crystalline granular Middle (Rauchwacke), and fine powdery (Asche) with gypsum at bottom . r Zechstein-limestone, an argillaceous, thin-bedded compact limestone 15 to 90 ft. thick . Lower Kupfer-schiefer, a black bituminous copper-bearing shale, not more than 2 ft. thick, often much less, but very constant . Zechstein-conglomerate and calcareous sandstone . Red sandstones (Kreuznach beds), red shales Upper (Monsig beds) with sheets of melaphyre tuff, and
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quartz-porphyry-conglomerate (Wadern, Oberhof, - Sotern and Tambach beds) . Sandstones and glomerates (Tholayer beds) on black shales with poor coal seams and clay iron-stones (Lebach and Goldlauter beds) . Lower Sandstones and shales with seams of coal on red and grey sandstones and shales with impure limestones (Cusel beds, including Manebach beds, upper, and Gehren beds, lower) . The name Rothliegende or Rothtodtliegende (red-dead-layer) was given by the miners because their ores disappeared in the red rocks below the copper-bearing Kupfer-schiefer . The Kupferschiefer, although so thin, has been worked in the
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Mansfeld
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district for a long period; it contains abundant remains of fish (Palaeoniscus, Platysomus) and
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plants (Ullmannia) .

The beds of rock-salt in the

German Zechstein are of the greatest importance; at Sperenberg near Berlin it has been penetrated to a
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depth of 4000 ft . Associated with the salt, gypsum and anhydrite are numerous Upper potassium and magnesium salts, including carnallite, kieserite and polyhalite, which are exploited at
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Stassfurt and are the only important potassium deposits known . Permian rocks of the Rothliegende type are scattered over a wide
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area in France, where the lower beds are usually conformable with the Coal Measures . In the upper beds occur the bituminous or " Boghead " shale of
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Autun . In Russia strata of this age cover an enormous area, in the Ural region, in the governments of Perm, Kasan,
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Kostroma, and in Armenia . The Russian Permian shows no sharp division into two series; the two types of deposit tend to be more mixed and include in addition some deposits of the more open sea . The general sequence begins with the Artinsk beds, sandy and manly or conglomeratic beds in close connexion with the Carboniferous, overlain by the
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Kungur limestones and dolomites; these are followed by red fresh-
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water sandstcnes, over which comes an important series of copper-bearing sandstones and conglomerates . Above this, in Kostroma, Vyatka and Kasan there is a calcareous and dolomitic series, the so-called " Russian Zechstein " with marine fossils; the uppermost beds are red marls, with few fresh-water fossils, the Tartarian beds . The character of the fossils in the Permian of the Mediterranean and south-east Europe—well exemplified in the deposits of Sicily—together with their more generally calcareous nature, indicate a more open sea and more
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stable marine conditions than obtained farther north . This sea is traceable across south-east Russia into the middle of Asia, through Turkestan and
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Persia, into the Salt Range of India, where the Productus limestone may be taken as representative of the normal marine plan of Permian times . Southwards, however, of the Nerbudda
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River another and quite distinct
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continental assemblage of deposits holds the ground, viz. the lower portion of the great fresh-water
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Gondwana system . The coarse Talchir conglomerates at the base are succeeded by the sandstones and shales of the Karharbari group, with numerous coal seams, and these in turn are followed by the Damuda series (upwards of io,000 ft.) of similar rocks, with ironstones and very valuable coal seams .

All these strata are characterized by the presence of the Glossopteris

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flora . A similar succession of beds has been recorded in north-west
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Afghanistan . In close relationship with the lower members of the
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Indian Gondwana series, both as regards fossil contents and lithological characters, are the lower Karoo beds of South Africa (Dwyka conglomerate, Ecca shales and mudstones, Beaufort beds and Kimberley shales), also the coal-bearing beds of the
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Transvaal; the Permo-carboniferous rocks of Australia (including the rich coal measures of Newcastle, the Greta coal measures and marine beds, upper and lower, of New South Wales; those of
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Tasmania, the Bowen River beds of
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Queensland, and the Bacchus Marsh glacial beds of Victoria), and similar rocks in New Zealand (Maitai formation, south island ; Dun.Mountainlimestone and Rimutaka beds of the north island) and South America . In North America Permian rocks occur in the east in Pennsylvania, West Virginia,
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Maryland and
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Ohio (" Upper Barren Measures "), and in Prince
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Edward Island, New Brunswick, where they succeed the Carboniferous rocks very regularly . West of the
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Mississippi, in
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Texas (7000 ft., including the
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Wichita beds, Clear Fork and Double Mountain beds), Kansas and
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Nebraska, the Permian is more extensive and on the whole is more readily separable from the Carboniferous . Here the lower beds are marine and contain many limestones and dolomites; the higher beds are mainly red sand-stones and marls with gypsum; in Texas it is of
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interest to note the occurrence of copper-stained strata . These upper " Red Beds " are-often not clearly distinguishable from the Trias .
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Life of the Permian Period.—The records of the plants and animals of this period are comparatively meagre . The plants show that a gradual change from the Carboniferous types was in progress . Two floral regions are clearly indicated, a
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northern and a southern . In the latter, which may be regarded as conterminous with the continent of Gondwana, the Lepidodendrons, Sigillarias, Calamites, &c., of the Coal Measures gave place to a distinct flora, named from the prevalence of Glossopteris, the Glossopteris (tongue-fern) flora . Traces of this southern flora have been found in northern Russia .

Gangamopteris, Callipteris, Taeniopteris, Schizopteris, Walchia, Voltzia, Ullmannia, Saportea, Baiera are characteristic Permian genera . Among the larger animals amphibians occupied a prominent position, their footprints being very

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common in the sandstones; they include numerous Labyrinthodonts, Archegosaurus, Stereorachis, Branchiosaurus . At this time the true reptiles began to leave their remains in the rocks; many highly interesting forms are known—Palaeohatteria, Proterosaurus, Stereosternum; others having certain mammalian characteristics include Pareiosaurus, Cynognathus, Dicynodon . Among the fishes may be mentioned Platysomus, Palaeoniscus, Amblypterus, Pleuracanthus . Turning to the invertebrates, undoubtedly the most interesting feature is gradual introduction into the
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Cephalopoda of the ammonite-like forms such as Medlicottia, Waagenoceras, Popanoceras, in place of the more
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simple lobed goniatites of the Carboniferous . Brachiopods (Productus horridus, Bakevellia tumida), Bryozoa and corals were by no means scarce in the more open Permian seas . Schizodus Schlotheimii, Strophalosia Goldfussi, Myophoria, Leimyalind, Bellerophon are characteristic Permian molluscs . The last of the
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trilobites appears in the Permian of North America . The evidence so far obtained indicates that in Permian times much of the land in the northern hemisphere was near the general sea-level, and that conditions of considerable aridity prevailed which involved the repeated
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isolation and evaporation of marine lagoons and land-locked seas . South of this region in
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Europe and Asia there extended an open " Mediterranean " sea, the " Tethys " of E . Suess; while over an enormous area in the southern hemisphere a great' land area was spread, " Gondwana land," the land of the Glossopteris flora . At many points in this vast tract, as we have seen, coarse conglomeratic. deposits, Talchir, Dwyka, Bacchus Marsh, &c., indicate profound glacial conditions, which some have thought were
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present also in Britain, Germany and elsewhere in the north .

Moderate

earth movements were taking place in North America, where the Appalachian and Ouachita mountains were in course of
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elevation, and in Europe this was a time of great volcanic activity . In the Saal region volcanic rocks in the lower Rothliegende have been penetrated for 1100 ft. without reaching the bottom, and elsewhere in central Europe great sheets of contemporaneous quartz porphyry, granite porphyry, melaphyre and porphyrite are abundant with their corresponding tuffs . Melaphyres and tuffs appear in the Vosges, which in the south of France are enormous masses of melaphyre and quartz porphyry . Basic lavas and tuffs—diabase, pierite,
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olivine
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basalt and
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andesite tuffs—were erupted from many small vents in
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Ayrshire and the Nish basin, and basic lavas occur also in Devonshire . Volcanic rocks occur also in New Zealand,
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Sumatra and the Transvaal . Table of Permian Strata, showing approximate correlations . Britain . Saxony, Basin of the Stages . Thuringia,
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Alps . Russia . India . North America .

Bohemia .

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Saar . Marls and Salt beds of Upper red Bellerophon Tartarian ^ a °' a ° ^ limestone . Marls . Thuringian gypsum . Stassfurt . 'a-,
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san d tones, Dolomites Cephalopod m 0 cr.) a o Ma nesian Zechstein lime- and shales beds of u 4-J Z g limestone. stones. u breccias and of Neumarkt . Armenia . ~ Kansas . Ho., v conglomerates . Marl slate . Kupfer-schiefer .

N Sandstones Copper- or,, y E Kiger a of GrOden. bearing a a Q

stage. a:5 ? Ca m ? c Red sandstones sandstones ro y U Salt F in Ural Fork a> v stage. o.0 E 3 a a Weissliegendes . with eruptive region. c°° Q a
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Pun abian u~ c ` Tambach beds . rocks . Limestones s. ua u v-o w beds b° The of or g o Tim' > Oberhof beds v Kreuznach, a and dolo- is ti v c b o W mites of Saxonian eu~ ° o G Goldlauter o 0 o a -o " beds. o Wadern, v d Kostroma A, ^ c ro - o o o~ Sotern, (Russian F4 0 t~, ' 'Z ` = u" Tholey . E Zechstein). cif v ~ v~ L c .x o Kungur and c cr) E v wellington o " D o c Manebach S Artinsk av a Q - a eds . °; A rti nski an o c - '- a beds. sr, Lebach beds. o sandstones. ti o o bM l ( a Brandschiefer Cusel beds. c . t, cn, c ro ofdstones,o-r} (marine) °.c T ~•" bedsn ro or s,-o a beds of Wessig. v c ~` Novaya ^ .. Chase Autunian c o o Gehren beds . Zemblyayand x p., a a] I g' (continental) N . 4•~~ Braunau beds ( Spitzbergen. a o a Q U of Bohemia .

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