Sinemurian Stage, second of the four divisions of the Lower Jurassic Series, representing all rocks formed worldwide during the Sinemurian Age, which occurred between 199.3 million and 190.8 million years ago during the Early Jurassic Period. The Sinemurian Stage overlies the Hettangian Stage and underlies the Pliensbachian Stage.
The Sinemurian Stage was named for exposures at Semur (the ancient Roman town of Sinemurum) in northeastern France, where a condensed sequence of limestones contains fossils of ammonites that lived during this time interval. In northwestern Europe, six major ammonite biozones have been recognized for the Lower and Upper Sinemurian. Because Sinemurian ammonites are less geographically differentiated than earlier Jurassic forms, theoretically there should be more possibilities for large-scale regional stratigraphic correlations. However, many of the ammonite species are rare outside of northwestern Europe, and detailed fine-scale correlations and temporal divisions have not yet been developed for most regions around the world.