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TERTIARY

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 661 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TERTIARY  , in

geology, the time-division which includes the Eocene, Oligocene,
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Miocene and Pliocene periods, in other words, it is the earlier portion of the Cainozoic era . By some authorities the
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term Tertiary is made to embrace in addition to the foregoing periods those of the
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Quaternary (
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Pleistocene and Holocene), i.e . " Tertiary " is made the
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equivalent of Cainozoic . On logical grounds there is much in favour of this interpretation; but having in view the state of
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geological literature, it is certainly better to restrict the use of the term in the manner indicated above . Tertiary rocks were among the latest to receive the careful attention of geologists, and the name was introduced by G . Cuvier and H . Brongniart in 18io (Essai sur la geographic mineralogique
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des environs de Paris, 18ro-11, 1st ed.) . Deshayes (183o) worked out the percentages of
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recent fossils found at several horizons in those strata, and upon this
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Sir C . Lyell (1852) founded the main periods, viz. the Eocene with 31 per cent. of recent forms, Miocene 17 per cent., Pliocene 35 to 50 per cent . Subsequent investigations naturally modified the numerical values upon which this nomenclature was based, but without altering the order of the periods . Later, E . Beyrich introduced the Oligocene period, and some geologists recognize a Palaeocene or early Eocene period .

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European geologists very generally use the grouping adopted by R . Horns : Younger Tertiary = Neogene (Miocene, Pliocene) . Older Tertiary = Palaeogene (Palaeocene, Eocene, Oligocene) . The
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great number and variety of mammalian remains has made it possible for the Tertiary rocks to be classified by their means: see A . Gaundry,
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Les enchainements du monde animal—mammiftres Tertiaires (1878) ; W . B . Dawkins, Q . J . Geol .
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Soc . Lond . (188o) ; Forsyth Major, Geol .

Mag . (

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London, 1899); and H . F . Osborn, J . L . \Vortman, G . F . Matthew, for western North
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America, Bull . Am .
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Mus . Nat . Wish, xii .

(1899) . During the Tertiary era the

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geographical configuration of the globe was steadily approaching that of the
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present day; but in the earlier
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part of the time there still existed the great
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equatorial ocean " Tethys," and there is evidence that East India and Africa,
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Australia and
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Asia, north
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Europe and North America were probably severally
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united by
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land connexions . As the period advanced, along the very
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line that had been occupied by the nummulitic sea (Tethys) the crust began to be folded up, giving rise to the
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Alps, Carpathians,
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Caucasus, Himalayas and other mountains, some of the early Tertiary marine formations being now found raised more than 16,000 ft. above the present level of the sea . Associated with these crustal movements were enormous outpourings of volcanic materials . The faunal aspect of the Tertiary periods differs strikingly from that of preceding Secondary or Mesozoic; in place of the great saurian reptiles we find the rapid development and finally the maximum expansion of mammals .
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Snakes and true birds advanced rapidly towards their
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modern position . In the seas, bony fish and crab-like decapods increased in numbers and variety, while pelecypods and gasteropods took the prominent place previously occupied by
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ammonites and belemnites, and, leaving behind such forms as Rudistes, Inoceramus, &c., they gradually
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developed in the direction of the modern regional groups . In the plant
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world, the dicotyledonous
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angiosperms gradually assumed the leading role which they occupy to-day . The
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climate in
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northern latitudes seems to have passed from temperate to sub-tropical, with minor fluctuations, until at the close a rapid lowering of temperature ushered in the glacial period . (J . A .

End of Article: TERTIARY
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TERTIARIES (Lat. tertiarii, from tertius, third)
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TERTULLIAN (c. 155-c. 222)

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