Online Encyclopedia

SILURIAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 111 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

SILURIAN  , in

geology, a series of strata which is here under-stood to include those Palaeozoic rocks which lie above the Ordovician and below the Devonian or Old Red
See also:
Sandstone, viz. the Llandoverian (Valentian of C . Lapworth), Wenlockian and Ludlovian groups of
See also:
Great Britain with their
See also:
foreign equivalents . A word of caution is necessary, however, for in the early
See also:
history of
See also:
British stratigraphy the exact delimitation of " Silurian" was the subject of a great controversy, and the
See also:
term has been used with such varying significance in
See also:
geological literature, that considerable confusion may arise unless the numerous interpretations of the title are understood . The name " Silurian " was first introduced by
See also:
Sir R . I . Murchison in 1835 for a series of rocks on the border counties of England and Wales—a region formerly inhabited by the
See also:
Silures . Murchison's Silurian em-braced not only the rock groups indicated above, but others below them that were much older, even such as are now classed as
See also:
Cambrian . About the same time A . Sedgwick proposed the term Cambrian for a great succession of rocks which includes much of Murchison's Silurian
See also:
system in its upper
See also:
part; hence arose that controversy which
See also:
left so lasting a mark on British geology . In 185o A. d'Orbigny suggested the name " Murchisonian " for what is here retained as the Silurian system . As a solution of the difficulties of nomenclature, Professor C . Lapworth in 1879 proposed the term Ordovician systems (q.v.) for those rocks which had been the
See also:
Lower Silurian of Murchison and the Upper Cambrian of Sedgwick .

An approximate correlation of the usages of the title " Silurian" is here given in tabulated

form: The Silurian rocks are almost wholly of marine origin and include all the usual phases of sedimentation; shales and mudstones, marls and limestones, sandstones and grits are all represented in Great Britain and in most other countries where the Silurian is known . The majority of the rocks were deposited in the comparatively shallow waters of epicontinental seas, the graptolitic shales and sponge-bearing cherts being perhaps the representative's of the deeper waters . Locally, glauconitic limestones and ironstones (Clinton beds) indicate
See also:
special conditions; while the
See also:
isolation and desiccation of certain marine areas (New York) towards the close of the period gave rise to beds of red sandstone, red marls,
See also:
gypsum and rock salt . The
See also:
hydraulic
See also:
limestone (
See also:
Water Lime) of New York was probably a brackish-water formation . In Sweden and elsewhere some of the limestones and shales are distinctly bituminous . Distribution.—In the preceding Ordovician period several well-marked marine provinces are indicated by the fossil contents of the rocks . At the beginning of Silurian time a general transgression of the sea—which had commenced at the close of the Ordovician—was in progress in the N. hemisphere (
See also:
Europe and the Appalachian region) . This culminated at the time when the
See also:
Wenlock beds and their equivalents (Niagaran and Oesel beds) were forming at the bottom of a great periarctic sea or shallow ocean . It is thus found that the same general characters prevail in the Silurian of Britain, N .
See also:
America, Scandinavia and the Baltic region,
See also:
Russian Poland (
See also:
Podolia,
See also:
Kielce, Galicia), the Arctic regions, New
See also:
Siberia (Kotelny), Olenk
See also:
district, Waigatsch, N . Zembla, Tunguska, Greenland,
See also:
Grinnell
See also:
Land and
See also:
China . The Bohemian region, comprising central Bohemia, Thuringia, Fichtelgebirge,
See also:
Salzburg, Pyrenees,
See also:
Languedoc, Catalonia, South Spain, Elba and Sardinia, alone retained some of its marked individuality .

Later in the period a

gradual withdrawal of the sea set in over the N. hemisphere, affecting the British
See also:
area (except Devon), the left of the Rhine, Norway and the Baltic region, N . Russia, Siberia and the Ural region, Spitzbergen, Greenland and the W. states of N: America . Thus the later Silurian conditions heralded those of the succeeding Devonian and Old Red Sandstone, and there is generally a gradual passage from one set of rocks to the other (Downtonian of Great Britain) . The Silurian rocks may occur in close continuity with the upper Ordovician, as in S . Europe; or, as in the typical region, the Llandovery beds may rest unconformably upon older rocks; in N . America also there is a marked unconformity on this horizon . A large part of N . America was apparently land during part of Silurian time; the lower members are found in the E. alone, while the Cayaguan division is found to extend farther E. than the
See also:
middle or Niagaran division, but not so far W . The falls of Niagara owe their existence to the presence of the hard
See also:
Lockport and
See also:
Guelph beds resting upon the softer Rochester shales . Most of the essential information as to the distribution of Silurian rocks will be found in a condensed form in the accompanying table and map; but attention may here be
See also:
drawn to the upper Silurian (Ludlovian) limestone of Cornwallis Island, the
See also:
mid-Silurian lime-stone of Grinnell Land and the lower Silurian limestone of New Siberia . Limestones of lower and middle Silurian age are found alsoin Timan, Tunguska and elsewhere in N . Russia .

Rocks of this system in S . America have been only superficially studied; they occur in the lower regions of the

See also:
Amazon, where they bear some resemblance to the Medina and Clinton stages of N . America, and in
See also:
Bolivia and Peru . Little is known of the Silurian rocks recorded from N . Africa . Silurian
See also:
Life.—Our know-ledge of the life of this period is limited to the inhabitants of the seas and of the brackish waters of certain districts . The remains of marine organisms are abundant and varied .
See also:
Graptolites flourished as in the pre-ceding period, but the forms characteristic of the Ordovician gave place early in the Silurian to the single-axis type (Monograptidae) which prevailed until the close of the period (Rastrites, Monograptus, Retiolites and Cyrtograptus) . As in the Ordovician rocks, the graptolites have been largely employed as zonal indicators .
See also:
Trilobites were important; the genera Calymene, Phacops and Encrinurus attained their maxi-mum development; Proetus, Bronteus, Cyphaspis, Arethusina may be mentioned from among many other genera . The ostracods Leperditia and Bey- richia are very abundant locally . A feature of great
See also:
interest is the first appearance of the remarkable Eurypterid crustacean Eurypterus, which occasionally reached the length of over a yard, and of the limulids, Neolimulus and Hemiaspis .

The cephalopods were the predominant molluscs, especially Orthoceras and various abbreviated or coiled orthoceras-like forms (Cyrtoceras, Phragmoceras, Trochoceras, Ascoceras) ; there was also a

See also:
Nautilus, and an early form of goniatite has been recorded . Gasteropods include the genera Platyceras, Murchisonia and Bellerophon; the pteropod Tentaculites is very abundant in certain beds . The pelecypods were not very important (Cypricardinia, Cardiola interrupta, C. cornucopiae) . Next to the cephalopods in importance were the brachiopods: in the lower Silurian pentamerus-like forms still continued (P . Knightii, P. oblongus), but the
See also:
spire-bearing forms soon began to increase (Spirifer, Whitfieldia, Meristina, Atrypa) . Other genera include Rhynchonella, Chonetes, Terebratula, Strophomena, Stricklandinia . The bryozoa, especially the bulky rock-
See also:
building forms, were less in evidence than in the Ordovician . The echinoderms were well represented by the crinoids (Cyathocrinus, Crotalocrinus, Taxocrinus), some of which are found in a state of beautiful preservation at Dudley in England, Lockport (New York); Waldron (
See also:
Indiana) in N . America and also in Gothland in the Baltic . Cystids were abundant, but less so than in the Ordovician; blastoids made their first appearance . Corals, mostly tabulate forms, flourished in great abundance in the clearer waters and frequently formed reefs (Favosites gothlandica, Halysites catenularia, Alveolites, Heliolites) ; tetracorallian forms include Stauria, Cyathophyllum, Cystiphyllum, Acervularia, Omphyma and the remarkable Goniophyllum .
See also:
Sponges were represented by Astylospongia, Aulocopium, &c .

The

See also:
peculiar genera Silurian Period :/ Suggested distribution of Land & Water Abet de Lapparent . toe shaded portions md%o,te tiviensin - wised alien. rocks Moe been /send R . I . Murchison . A . Sedgwick . C . Lapworth .
See also:
American . A. de Lapparent . E . Renevier .

Silurian . c = ro c a ' ai (Upper Silurian cr.) •i.0. m ° re, ^ •d a of some authors.) uv (=I 4 ti v Z. to ° b,o o 4 ~°ao-c .: 5 occ C C7 M Z . C5 (/1 a LLa se- e . — E c — Ordovician . = c •- o (Lower Silurian o E of some authors.) 0 CL ti E Um re: x '1~ a U M •~, .a U Cambrian. ro Upper . , Middle . - s:i Lower . U Graptolite England d c, a

North America v`e ;~ ... 3i ~i .~ Zones and Scotland . Scandinavian . Baltic Region . Bohemia .

.0 (New York) . (Britain) .

Wales . U~ p d Monograptus Downton Downtonian Upper Cardiola Eurypterus Stage E2 of
See also:
Manlius leints.ardin- and and beds and upper beds . J . Barrande . limestone . y •,: ens,s . Ludlow Raeberry Cephalopod or a Rondout 3 ,o M. bohemicus. groups . Castle Gothland lime- Limestones ° Water Lime . C S 2 •y 'a' beds. stone . with Cobleskill cephalopods .

limestone. t7 ° (n ° M . Vilssoni . Red sandstone . Upper Oesel

See also:
Salina beds of d k; o y x Eis' E >' Lower cephalopod beds: o
See also:
Onondaga ea u limestone.
See also:
dolomite with U eu ca ' ~ ° ZF tl Crinoid and
See also:
coral and c 4 rock salt d o c o° limestone. limestones . •~ and •^ ;; g c e ^ O gypsum . `°,c Lower Cardiola a a '"E shales and Mega- harms p . :Q ~ a 8 harms limestones . C y r t o g r
See also:
apt u s Lower Oesel Crinoid oz S'j Guelph a BU a s o M. testis . Wenlock Riccarton, and Blair, shales and lower beds: limestones . $ ^ dolomite . o Cyrtograptus Woolhope and brachiopod and dolomite N ° Z g Linnarssoni. groups . Straiton coral limestone and L' -o Lockport d ° beds. with sandstone. marl .

E limestone . ¢ a y a ~ .2= Cvrtograptus ^.ty c7 b a Murchisoni, a Rochester ° shales . Z et . 5 .7•~ Clinton beds . '5 o MR cy boo i-7 N 3 4 o ^ y CO v rb o m '~/ . « q 8 n Rastrites Tarannon,

Queensberry Rastrites shales Penlarnerus Stage Er of ,°._'-5 a -0 o o a .`r maximas . Llandovery, beds. and Strickland- beds . J . Barrande. o~ `d Medina .~ o and inia marls . Graptolite a sandstone . Z a " ~' a u M. spinigerus . May Hilt Birkhill shales shales M m d ^ as `u ° a.a ...

, 3 G ty o N groups. and with N

Oneida V U 3•« M. gregarius . Graptolitic beds
See also:
diabase E conglomerate . 2 N E Ey of the at the
See also:
base . us 0 °a Diplograptus
See also:
Girvan area . ° Shawangunk 0 3 Z ° c N'o toes iculosus . ma o. grit. a Li •E q c7 3 E Diplograplus p4° 00 ar uminalus . Receptaculites and Ischadites occur in the Silurian .
See also:
Foraminifera and
See also:
radiolaria also left their remains in the rocks . The most highly organized animals of the Silurian period were the fishes which had already made their appearance in the Ordovician rocks of
See also:
Colorado and Russia . The Silurian fish include selachians (Onchus, Thyestis), and the occurrence of remains of the obscure backboned
See also:
ostracoderms (placoderms) is particularly worthy of
See also:
notice (Pteraspis, Cephalaspis, Tremataspis, Cyathaspis, Thelodus, Lanarkia, Eukeraspis) . Scorpions (Palaesphonus) have been found in
See also:
Lanark, Gothland and New York . Plant remains are very fully represented; land
See also:
plants have been recorded from the Harz and Kellerwald (H .

Potonie, 1901), and large silicified stems—up to 2 ft. in diameter—perhaps representing a gigantic seaweed (Nematophycus), have been found in Wales and in

See also:
Canada . Pachytheca is a small spherical
See also:
body often associated with Nematophycus . Girvanella is another obscure algal plant . As a natural result of the open character of the great Silurian periarctic sea referred to above, there are many points of resemblance between the
See also:
fauna of the several regions of the N. hemisphere; this has been specially noticed in the community not only of genera but of
See also:
species between Britain, Sweden and the interior of N . America (
See also:
Iowa, Wisconsin,
See also:
Illinois) . ' Goniophyllum pyramidale is
See also:
common to Iowa and Gothland; Atrypa reticularis, Orthoceras annulatum and not a few others are common to Europe and N . America . An extremely interesting circumstance is the admixture of a periarctic and Bohemian fauna in the Australasian region . In a general sense the Silurian period was one of
See also:
comparative quiescence as regards crustal disturbances, and a relative sinking of the land was followed by a relative
See also:
elevation affecting wide areas in the N. hemisphere .
See also:
Local oscillations, such as those taking part in the formation of the Salina beds, &c., were naturally taking place, but the folding of the Scandinavian mountains and in the N. highlands of Scotland continued throughout the period accompanied by a great amount of thrusting . Volcanic activity was quite subordinate in Silurian times; flows of diabase occurred at the commencement of the period in Bohemia, and evidence of minor basaltic flows and tuffs is found at "I'ortworth in Gloucestershire and at a few localities in N . America .

For further information, see articles on the CAMBRIAN, ORDOVICIAN, LLANDOVERY, \VENLOCII, LUDLOW Systems and Groups . (J . A .

End of Article: SILURIAN
[back]
SILURES
[next]
ANTONIO JOSE DA SILVA (1705–1739)

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.