Cambrian rocks

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Types and distribution

Cambrian rocks have a special biological significance, because they are the earliest to contain diverse fossils of animals. These rocks also include the first appearances of most animal phyla that have fossil records. Cambrian evolution produced such an extraordinary array of new body plans that this event has been referred to as the Cambrian explosion. The beginning of this remarkable adaptive radiation has been used to divide the history of life on Earth into two unequal eons. The older eon, spanning approximately four billion years of Precambrian time (and sometimes referred to as the Cryptozoic Eon), began with Earth’s formation some 4.6 billion years ago. The Precambrian also includes the first appearance of life on Earth, which is represented by rocks with mainly bacteria, algae, and similar primitive organisms. The younger, approximately half-billion-year-old Phanerozoic Eon, which began with the Cambrian explosion some 538.8 million years ago and continues to the present, is characterized by rocks with conspicuous animal fossils.

Rocks of Cambrian age occur on all of the continents, and individual sections may range up to thousands of metres thick. The most fossiliferous and best-studied deposits are principally from marine continental-shelf environments. Among the thicker and better-documented sections are those in the Cordilleran region of western North America, the Siberian Platform of eastern Russia, and areas of central and southern China. Other well-documented fossiliferous but thinner sections are located in Australia (especially in western Queensland), the Appalachian Mountains of eastern North America, Kazakhstan, and the Baltic region (most notably in Sweden).

Lateral changes in the composition of Cambrian rocks resulted from regional differences in environments of deposition. Nearshore deposits are commonly composed of siliceous sandstone. This usually grades seaward into siltstone and shale, which formed by accumulation of finer-grained sediment in deeper water where the seafloor was less affected by wave action. Extensive carbonate platforms, analogous to the present-day Bahama Banks, developed along some continental shelves that were in low latitudes during Cambrian time. Rapid production of carbonate sediment in this warm, shallow-water environment resulted in massive deposits of Cambrian limestone and dolomite. Examples are exposed in the Cordilleran region of North America, in north central Australia, along the Yangtze River in central China, and along the Lena River in Siberia. Few Cambrian rocks from land environments have been documented, and most of those are of limited areal extent. They mainly represent deposits of floodplains and windblown sand. Without plants or animals, the desolation of Cambrian landscapes must have rivaled that of any present-day desert. In the absence of plants with roots to hold soil in place, Cambrian lands in general probably eroded more rapidly than they do now.

Relative sea level rose significantly during the Cambrian, but with fluctuations. This is indicated by both the geographic distribution and the stratigraphic layering of sedimentary deposits. In North America, for example, marine deposits from earlier in the period covered only marginal areas, whereas later marine deposits covered much of the continent. Similar distributions of marine rocks are present on other continents. In stratigraphic sections from continental shelves that were located in low latitudes, it is common for a basal nearshore sandstone to be overlain by layers of more seaward shale and carbonate rocks deposited during times of high sea level. Shelf sections from high latitudes may be mostly or entirely sandstone, or a basal sandstone deposit may grade upward into shale, but most of these sections contain evidence of marine transgression. Exceptions to the general Cambrian sea-level pattern are commonly attributable either to local tectonism or to different rates of sediment accumulation. The most likely explanation for the general rise in Cambrian sea level seems to be increased thermal activity and related swelling of spreading ridges between lithospheric plates, which would displace vast quantities of seawater. It has been suggested that these periods of marine inundation exerted an influence on adaptive radiation (the proliferation of organic lineages) by greatly increasing the area of shallow seas where life was most abundant.

Boundaries and subdivisions of the Cambrian System

The lower boundary of the Cambrian System is defined at a formal global stratotype section and point (GSSP), which was ratified by the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) of the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) in 1992. The stratotype section is located at Fortune Head on the Burin Peninsula of southeastern Newfoundland in Canada. It contains a thick and continuous marine succession of mostly shale, siltstone, and sandstone. The stratotype point, representing a moment in time, is in the lower part of the Chapel Island Formation. It coincides with the base of the remnant burrows of the fossil Trichophycus pedum and marks the first occurrence of well-developed, fairly complex metazoans (group of animals composed of multiple, differentiated cells). This is currently regarded as the most useful benchmark on which to characterize both the lower boundary of Cambrian time and the beginning of the Phanerozoic Eon. T. pedum can be found on most continents, and its chronological position puts it slightly younger than Ediacaran fossils (around 570 million years ago) and some 20 million years older than the small shelly fossils dated to the early parts of the Cambrian Period.

While there is general agreement on the point in time picked for the beginning of the Cambrian Period, the ensuing 55–56 million years of Cambrian time has yet to be completely settled. The ICS has divided the period into four epochs. Only two, the Terreneuvian and Furongian, have been named. The boundaries of additional subdivisions are approximate.

The lower boundary of the Ordovician System indirectly defines the upper boundary of the Cambrian System. A formal boundary stratotype coincides with the first appearance of the conodont Iapetognathus fluctivagus. This boundary marks the base of the Tremadoc Series in the Ordovician System. British geologists have traditionally assigned rocks and fossils of Tremadoc age to the Cambrian, whereas many others have assigned them to the Ordovician.

Rocks in the Cambrian-type area in Wales are so poorly exposed, structurally complicated, and sparsely fossiliferous that they have had little influence on development of modern concepts of the Cambrian and its subdivisions. In fact, many rocks in the Cambrian-type area have been reassigned to either the Precambrian or the Ordovician. Rocks in Wales that are now assigned to the Cambrian System roughly correspond to Sedgwick’s Lower Cambrian.

Economic significance of Cambrian deposits

Cambrian rocks are of moderate economic importance, as they provide a variety of resources. For example, ore bodies rich in such metals as lead, zinc, silver, gold, and tungsten have secondarily replaced Cambrian carbonate rocks, especially in parts of North America and Australia. Other carbonate rocks have been widely used as building stone and for making lime and portland cement. Large Cambrian phosphorite deposits are major sources of agricultural fertilizer in northern Australia, southwestern China, and southern Kazakhstan. Other Cambrian resources in China are mercury, uranium, and salt. Eastern Russia also has salt deposits of Cambrian age, as well as those of bauxite, the chief commercial source of aluminum. Some oil fields in southern Siberia produce oil from Lower Cambrian rocks.

Correlation of Cambrian strata

Time correlation of Cambrian rocks has been based almost entirely on fossils. The most common fossils in Cambrian rocks are trilobites, which evolved rapidly and are the principal guide fossils for biostratigraphic zonation in all but rocks below the Atdabanian Stage or those of equivalent age. Until the mid-1900s, almost all trilobite zones were based on members of the order Polymerida. Such trilobites usually have more than five segments in the thorax, and the order includes about 95 percent of all trilobite species. Most polymeroids, however, lived on the seafloor, and genera and species were mostly endemic to the shelves of individual Cambrian continents. Therefore, polymeroid trilobites are useful for regional correlation but have limited value for intercontinental correlation, which has been difficult and subject to significant differences in interpretation.

From the 1960s, investigators began to recognize that many species of the trilobite order Agnostida have intercontinental distributions in open-marine strata. These trilobites are small, rarely exceeding a few millimetres in length, and they have only two thoracic segments. Specialized appendages, which were probably useful for swimming but unsuitable for walking on the seafloor, suggest that they were pelagic (living in the open sea). Agnostoids make up less than 5 percent of all trilobite species, but individuals of some agnostoid species are abundant. This fact, together with their wide geographic distribution and rapid evolution, makes them valuable for refined intercontinental correlation. Agnostoids first appear in upper Lower Cambrian rocks but did not become common or diversify significantly until the middle of the Cambrian. Therefore, agnostoids have their greatest biostratigraphic value in the upper half of the Cambrian System. A comprehensive trilobite zonation in Sweden has frequently been cited as a standard for correlation.

Other kinds of fossils have had more limited use in Cambrian biostratigraphy and correlation. Among them are the archaeocyathan sponges in the Lower Cambrian and brachiopods (moss animals) throughout the Cambrian, but use of both groups has been hampered by problems of endemism. Small mollusks and other small shelly fossils, mostly of problematic affinities, have been employed for biostratigraphy in the Tommotian Stage (a Russian designation for the pretrilobite portion of the Cambrian explosion), but their utility is also limited by endemism. Conodonts appear in the uppermost Precambrian but are rare in most Cambrian rocks except those of latest Cambrian age, when adaptive radiation of conodont animals accelerated. Wide species distributions, rapid evolution, and abundance make conodonts excellent indexes for global biostratigraphy in uppermost Cambrian to uppermost Triassic rocks.

Since roughly the 1980s, trace fossils have been used with limited precision to correlate uppermost Precambrian and basal Cambrian strata. Although the biostratigraphic use of such fossils has many problems, they nevertheless demonstrate progressively more complex and diverse patterns of locomotion and feeding by benthic (bottom-dwelling) marine animals. T. pedum, which initially appears in Cambrian deposits and marks the base of the period, demonstrates the first regularly branching burrow pattern.

Rex E. Crick Markes E. Johnson Richard A. Robison