Major subdivisions

The Permian Period is subdivided into Early (Cisuralian), Middle (Guadalupian), and Late (Lopingian) epochs corresponding to the Cisuralian, Guadalupian, and Lopingian rock series. Rocks laid down during these epochs and ages have been assigned to corresponding depositional series and stages, respectively. The Cisuralian Epoch takes its name from its type region on the western slopes of the Ural Mountains in Russia and Kazakhstan and is subdivided into four internationally recognized ages: the Asselian (298.9 million to 295.5 million years ago), Sakmarian (295.5 million to 290.1 million years ago), Artinskian (290.1 million to 279.3 million years ago), and Kungurian (279.3 million to 272.3 million years ago). The Guadalupian Epoch takes its name from its type area in the Guadalupe Mountains of the West Texas region in the United States and contains three internationally recognized ages: the Roadian (272.3 million to 268.8 million years ago), Wordian (268.8 million to 265.1 million years ago), and Capitanian (265.1 million to 259.9 million years ago). The Lopingian Epoch takes its name from its type area in China and contains two internationally recognized ages: the Wuchiapingian (259.9 million to 254.2 million years ago) and Changhsingian (254.2 million to 252.2 million years ago). Lower Triassic beds overlie the Lopingian Series.

The establishment of time equivalence of Permian strata between different areas has been a serious problem since the mid-19th century. Most Permian invertebrate faunas from marine environments are strongly endemic (localized in one or a few nearby areas) and thus difficult to correlate between different paleobiotic provinces. However, in the type regions of each of these series, all located within the paleoequatorial warm-water conodont (a primitive chordate with tooth-shaped fossil remains) province, a succession of these pelagic faunas continues to undergo description. While this will not lead to the global correlation of certain fossils, it is useful enough to define some regional patterns and assist in the general correlation of each particular rock series.

Subdivisions within the Permian Period are classified by the emergence of several species of conodonts. In the Cisuralian Series the first appearance of Streptognathodus isolatus marks the base of the Asselian Stage, the first appearance of Sweetognathus merrilli marks the base of the Sakmarian, Sweetognathus whitei and Mesogondolella bisselli mark the base of the Artinskian, and Neostreptognathodus pnevi and N. exculptus mark the base of the Kungurian. The first appearance of Jinogondolella nankingensis specifies the base of the Roadian Stage in the Guadalupian Series, the first appearance of Jinogondolella aserrata indicates the base of the Wordian, and the first appearance of Jinogondolella postserrata marks the base of the Capitanian. The emergence of Clarkina postbitteri marks the base of the Wuchiapingian Stage in the Lopingian Series; and the first appearance of Clarkina wangi characterizes the base of the Changhsingian. The base of the Triassic Period is indicated by the first appearance of Hindeodus parvus.

Different conodont zonations must be used for the colder waters surrounding Gondwana. These zones, which are in the process of being described and established, are based on different conodont species, and even different genera, from those found in the Northern Hemisphere. Even in the paleoequatorial belt, some of the conodont guide species do not appear in all areas, and certain successions of conodonts are rare (as in the sediments of the Tethys Sea) or do not appear at all. For these successions, local series and stage names remain useful, particularly in identifying different nonmarine successions.

Economic significance of Permian deposits

Permian rocks have long been economically important sources of evaporite minerals, such as halite (rock salt), sylvite (potash salts), gypsum and anhydrite (calcium sulfate salts), petroleum, and coal. The distribution of these resources, in part, is related to the latitudes where they were deposited. Evaporites were particularly common in subtropical and tropical Permian paleolatitudes in what is now West Texas, New Mexico, and Kansas in North America and in northwestern Europe and the European part of Russia. Thick coals formed in cool temperate paleolatitudes, such as central and northern Siberia, Manchuria, Korea, peninsular India, eastern Australia, South Africa, Zimbabwe, and the Congo. These locations lay in higher latitudes during the Permian Period.

Many Permian marine basins produce petroleum. The most famous oil fields are in the United States—in Oklahoma and the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico—and along the Ural orogenic belt in Russia.

Phosphorites (sedimentary rocks with economic amounts of various phosphate-bearing minerals) are common in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada. They were deposited in deepwater sedimentary wedges next to the Permian continental shelf margin at the western edge of the North American craton. In Europe, phosphorites occur along a deepwater trough marking the eastern edge of the Russian Platform.

Of significance to European civilizations is the Permian Kupferschiefer, a copper-bearing shale that has been mined for hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of years. In addition, pinnacle reefs composed of limestones from the Cisuralian Series occur along the southeastern margins of the Russian Platform. The Ishimbay oil fields of this region were a critical source of petroleum for the former Soviet Union during World War II after their fields to the west fell under German control.

Occurrence and distribution of Permian deposits

Permian rocks are common to all present-day continents; however, some have been moved—sometimes thousands of kilometres—from their original site of deposition by tectonic transport during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras. For example, Permian glacial terrestrial and marine deposits typical of the cold high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere are now found in Antarctica, southern Africa, India, Thailand, and Tibet, and glacial deposits of the Northern Hemisphere laid down at that time are found in northeastern Siberia. By contrast, some Permian tropical and subtropical carbonate deposits, typical of deposition in low latitudes, were relocated to high latitudes. The present location of certain fossilized animals, endemic to the tropics during Permian time, suggests that other deposits were also moved great distances longitudinally (on a north-south axis). These deposits formed accreted terranes (smaller landmasses subsequently added onto continents) that became attached to the margins of some continents during Mesozoic and Cenozoic times. The present-day locations of Permian deposits are explained by the theory of plate tectonics. When the Permian globe is reconstructed, these apparent conflicts in rock deposition disappear, and a plausible arrangement of deposition, which is consistent with Permian climate patterns, emerges.

Carbonate provinces

Two tropical to subtropical carbonate provinces are recognized centred near the paleoequator but on opposite sides of Pangea. One includes the southwestern United States and northwestern South America. The other, which is much larger and has a more diverse fauna, includes the Tethys belt of rocks from Tunisia and the Carnic Alps of present-day Italy and Austria on the west through Turkey, Iran, southern China, Southeast Asia, and Japan to central British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California. The Tethys carbonate province was thoroughly disrupted by orogenic deformation (as the result of seafloor spreading and plate tectonics) after the Permian Period ended. Thus, the remains now reside in almost entirely dislocated fragments.

Sediments in tectonically active regions

In terms of geologic setting, Permian sediments deposited as thick sedimentary wedges along the tectonically active margins of the major cratons are least understood. Most of these Permian sediments have been thrust and involved in major geologic deformation. Much of the fossil evidence is from clastic material derived from shallow shelf environments or eroded from older rocks and deposited as deepwater debris fans. Thick deposits—perhaps originally 1 to 3 km (0.6 to 1.9 mi) thick—are known in central Nevada, Idaho, and northward into Canada. Similar deposits occur in the Middle East, China, Japan, and eastern Siberia.

Interleaved with these thick clastic wedges are other thrust slices of ocean-floor deposits. These are thinner, about 0.5 km (0.3 mi) thick or less, and are characterized by radiolarian-rich cherts, basaltic volcanic dikes, sills, and submarine lava flows, as well as silts and clays of the distal ends of turbidity flows. All Permian (and older) ocean-floor deposits and thick sedimentary wedges have been caught up in Mesozoic and Cenozoic subduction zones along plate boundaries and either form accretionary wedges or were lost to the Earth’s mantle.

Limestone

Associated with some oceanic basalts are thick accumulations of tropical and subtropical reef limestone that formed on seamounts and volcanic island arcs. Because limestone is comparatively less dense than adjacent oceanic rocks, such as basalt or chert, many of the Permian reef limestones were not as readily subducted. They are present in many accretionary wedges, such as those found in Tunisia, the Balkan Peninsula, Turkey, the Crimea (in Ukraine), the Middle East, northern India, Pakistan, Southeast Asia, New Zealand, China, Japan, eastern Siberia, Alaska, the Western Cordillera of Canada and the United States, and a small part of northwestern Mexico.

Other limestones were deposited as reefs along the outer margins of sedimentary basins. Striking examples of these reefs form the Guadalupe Mountains of western Texas and New Mexico. Such reefs also occur in the subsurface along the Central Basin Platform in western Texas, where they are a source of petroleum. Similar reefs are found in northern England, Germany, and the subsurface of the North Sea. Lower Permian limestone reefs are found in the western and southern Urals of eastern Europe.

Basin sedimentation

Cratonic shelf sedimentation in low paleolatitudes during Permian time was characterized by the gradual withdrawal of shorelines and the progressive increase in eolian (wind-transported) sands, red beds, and evaporites. Many intracratonic basins—such as the Anadarko, Delaware, and Midland basins in the western United States; the Zechstein Basin of northwestern Europe; and the Kazan Basin of eastern Europe—show similar general changes. In most basins the inner parts became sites of red bed deposition during the Early Permian, followed by periods of extensive evaporite production. Sand sources along the ancestral Rocky Mountains supplied eolian sand and silt in great quantities.

The outer portions of the intracratonic basin systems, as in the Delaware and Zechstein basins, were involved in some transform faulting (process where two tectonic plates slide past one another) and extensional tectonics (the stretching and rifting of a continental plate), which produced landforms of considerable relief in some areas. Although some of this relief was from rotated fault blocks, most of it resulted from the very rapid growth of limestone reefs on upthrown blocks (that is, the sides of faults that appear to have moved upward) and the slower accumulation of clastic sediments on downthrown blocks.

At higher paleolatitudes, limestone is rare, and clastic rocks dominate the succession (the progressive sequence of rocks). Australia, Namibia, South Africa, peninsular India, southern Tibet, and southern Thailand all report Permo-Carboniferous tillite. These areas, as the paleogeographic reconstruction indicates, would have been in relatively high Gondwanan latitudes (closer to the South Pole) during the Permian Period, and thus their geology was affected by the expansion and contraction of glaciers. Tillites are also known from the northern high paleolatitudes in northeastern Siberia.

Some areas of Gondwana were tectonically active during Permian time, as evidenced by extensive basaltic, andesitic, and other volcanic rocks in eastern Australia. In addition, intracratonic sedimentary marine basins, such as the Carnarvon Basin in Western Australia, where nearly 5 km (3 mi) of Permian sediments accumulated, were formed.

Continental rocks were widespread on all cratons during the Permian Period. The Dunkard Group is a limnic (deposited in fresh water), coal-bearing succession that was deposited from the latest of Carboniferous times into Early Permian time along the western side of the then newly formed Appalachian Mountains. Coal-bearing Lower and Upper Permian beds—up to 3 km (1.9 mi) thick—are widely distributed in Australia, peninsular India (the lower part of the Gondwana System), southern Africa (the lower part of the Karoo System), the Kuznetsk Basin of western Siberia, the Paraná Basin of southern Brazil, and the Precordillera Basin of western Argentina. Red beds were common in the continental beds of tropical and subtropical paleolatitudes.

Correlation of Permian strata

Major subdivisions of the Permian Period are identified by extended periods of lowered sea level and by major faunal change. To overcome problems of shallow-water marine provincialism, biostratigraphers have increasingly turned to more open-ocean fossils, including cephalopods (which also are surprisingly provincial) and conodonts (which appear to be less provincial but whose biological affinities are poorly known).