CRETACEOUS PERIOD

krĭtāˈshəs, third and last period of the Mesozoic era of geologic time (see Geologic Timescale, table), lasting from approximately 144 to 65 million years ago. The Cretaceous was marked, in both North America and Europe, by extensive submergences of the continents. Changes both in the earth's surface and in its flora and fauna brought the Mesozoic to a close.

Historical Geology of the Period

The Lower Cretaceous Period

At the beginning of the Lower Cretaceous in North America, the Mexican Sea of the late Jurassic period spread over Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and parts of Arizona, Kansas, and Colorado. Deposits from this inland sea, known as the Comanchean Sea, were chiefly limestone (up to 1,500 ft/457 m thick in Texas) but some continental sediments (i.e., sandstone, shale, and conglomerate) mark the reemergence of land, which brought the Lower Cretaceous to a close. The Comanchean Sea was probably separated by a land barrier from contemporaneous seas in the California areas, where 26,000 ft (7,925 m) of Shastan shales, with sandstone and thin limestone, were laid down. The sediments were derived by rapid erosion from the recently elevated Sierra Nevada and Klamath mts. In Montana, Alberta, and British Columbia the Kootenai deposits of sandstone and sandy shale, which contain workable deposits of good coal, were formed; along the Atlantic coast the unconsolidated sandy clay, gravel, and sand of the Potomac series were deposited.

The Lower Cretaceous opened in NW Europe with the deposition of a continental and freshwater formation, the Wealden sand and clay, best displayed in England. The sea, meanwhile, expanded from the Mediterranean, finally overlaying successive Wealden strata with limestone. There was at the same time an extensive sea in N Europe. At the close of the Lower Cretaceous, there was some recession of the seas; by the Upper Cretaceous, the great transgression of seas submerged lands that had been open since the Paleozoic.

The Upper Cretaceous Period

The Upper Cretaceous opened in W North America with the deposition of continental sands (now the Dakota sandstone), which, however, were covered by the ensuing rise of the Colorado Sea. The Colorado Sea was the greatest of the North American Mesozoic seas and extended all the way from Mexico up into the Arctic, covering most of central North America. The Colorado deposits were composed chiefly of shales, limestone, and some chalk in Kansas and South Dakota. Slight shifting of the sea was followed by the deposition of the Montana shale and sandstone and then by withdrawal of the sea. Near the end of the Upper Cretaceous, conditions in the west were similar to those of the Carboniferous period in other regions; swamps and bogs were formed that later became valuable deposits of coal.

At the close of the Cretaceous the Laramide revolution occurred—at least two different epochs of mountain building and one of relative quiet. In this disturbance the Rockies and the E Andes were first elevated, and there were extensive flows of lava. The Appalachians, which had been reduced almost to base level by erosion, were rejuvenated, and the seas retreated from all parts of the continent. The intermittent character of the Laramide disturbance makes difficult the demarcation of the Mesozoic and the succeeding Cenozoic era.

The striking feature of the European Upper Cretaceous are great chalk deposits from small carbonate-bearing marine algae and calcareous fauna, now exposed in the cliffs of the English Channel. In India the late Upper Cretaceous was marked by an overflow of lava in the Deccan plateau. The area covered by igneous rocks dating from this period now comprises over 200,000 sq mi (518,000 sq km) and was formerly much larger, having been reduced by erosion. Near Bombay the formation is 10,000 ft (3,000 m) thick.

Movement of the Continents

During the Cretaceous period the massive continents of Gondwanaland and Laurasia continued to separate. South America and Africa had separated, with the consequent widening of the S Atlantic. The N Atlantic continued to expand, although it appears that Europe, Greenland, and North America were still connected. Madagascar had separated from Africa, while India was still drifting northward toward Asia. The Tethys Sea was disappearing as Africa moved north toward Eurasia. Antarctica and Australia had yet to separate.

Evolution of Plant and Animal Life

The Lower Cretaceous is characterized by a revolution in the plant life, with the sudden appearance of flowering plants (angiosperms) such as the ancestors of the beech, fig, magnolia, and sassafras. By the end of the Cretaceous such plants became dominant. Willow, elm, grape, laurel, birch, oak, and maple also made their appearance, along with grass and the sequoias of California. Closely associated with the angiosperms were insects, including a form of the dragonfly, and most were similar to today's insects. This prepared the way for the increase in mammals in the late Cenozoic. The marine invertebrates of the Cretaceous included nautiluses, barnacles, lobsters, crabs, sea urchins, ammonites, and foraminifers. Reptiles reached their zenith, including the dinosaurs Triceratops, Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, Apatosaurus (Brontosaurus), and Iguanodon, and ranged from herbivores to carnivores. Flying reptiles such as the pterosaurs were highly developed, while in the sea there were ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, and mosasaurs. Other reptiles living in this period include crocodiles and giant turtles; snakes and lizards made their first appearance at this time. True mammals, which had already appeared in the Triassic period, were rare, as the Cretaceous reptiles dominated.

The climate of the Cretaceous was apparently fairly mild and uniform, but it is possible that toward the end of the period some variant zones of climate had appeared, making the overall climate cooler. Such changes, along with changes in both the earth's surface and its flora and fauna, brought the Mesozoic to a close.

By the end of the Cretaceous, about 75% of all species, including marine, freshwater, and terrestrial organisms, became extinct. The rather abrupt disappearance of Cretaceous life remains a mystery. Theories for the extinctions include one or a mixture of the following: drastic cooling of the globe, retreat of the seas, breakup of the continents (see continental drift), biological disease, reversals of the earth's magnetic field, or a change in atmospheric carbon dioxide and oxygen. Another popular theory was introduced in 1980 by Luis Alvarez and colleagues at the Univ. of California. Alvarez proposed that the earth was struck by an asteroid or comet about 6 mi (10 km) in diameter around 65 million years ago. Such an impact (or collection of impacts) would spread dust into the atmosphere, suppressing photosynthesis and changing the food chain. Evidence for an impact includes an anomalous iridium layer, typical of meteorites, and some probable impact craters dated to the late Cretaceous.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Cretaceous Period  - 814 results

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...the Ural Mountains; and the Cretaceous period is from the Latin for "chalky...extinction that ended the Cretaceous period. Cretaceous dinosaurs died...died out by the end of the Cretaceous period some sixty-five million years...
...Tertiary limestone and a surrounding band of Cretaceous chalk, and they show considerable variation...Plate 2.1; m.r.13 and at the multi-period site at Berry-au-Bac Aisne; m. r. 14...can be conveniently divided into three periods: Late Bandkeramik c-4100-3900bc, Epi...
...C. But during this latter period a new style of habitation came...been found chiefly in the cretaceous subsoil of Champagne. The skeletons...contemporary with it, the period which witnessed their construction...found, dating from the same period, huge stones pointing skyward...
...which stood above ground in the London of the later Roman period; and below that a hard, black layer about an inch thick. It...is near Fenny Stratford, after leaving the chalk and the cretaceous sandstone country; but the clay here is low- lying, and a...
...Balkanic Neolithic, led to a long period of dormancy. Active research...orogenic phase during the mid-Cretaceous. The latter took place progressively...sediments of the Late Glacial period. With their good potential...Greece witnesses alternating periods of closed-in regional developments...
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journal articles on: Cretaceous Period  - 41 results

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...between December and March, with periodic cyclones during the wet...hinterland, a laterised plateau of Cretaceous sediments, slopes down gently...during the dry season, the period of highest archaeological visibility...Brockwell 1996b) during and after a period of transition from mangrove...
...opinion 6|7* is that since the Cretaceous period, the forest vegetation of the...least since the end of the Cretaceous period. What evidence can one oppose...least since the end of the Cretaceous period", and that "the forest vegetation...
...griffin legend was based upon interpretations by Scythian gold-miners of the fossil remains of Protoceratops, a Cretaceous period four-legged, birdlike dinosaur found in the Gobi Desert. Trade made possible the cultural transfer of Scythian folklore...
...last quarter of the Cretaceous period, when the number...record during the late Cretaceous/early Tertiary period. My hypothesis for...Sepkoski JJ Jr. Periodic extinction of families...extinction theories at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary...
...sands that underlie the area known as "Wood Buffalo." These are the imbedded petroleum tars, bituminous sands of the Cretaceous period, that form the vast petroleum deposits of northern Alberta. Their recovery, both difficult and expensive, uses hydroextraction...
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magazine articles on: Cretaceous Period  - 62 results

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...many angiosperms in the Cretaceous period appears to me a most...plants within a brief period of earths history-and...record to the Early Cretaceous, some 130 million years...through layers of Early Cretaceous fossils-have radically...
...their closest relatives originated on New Caledonia before the smaller island separated from Australia in the late Cretaceous period. As Australia drifted north, its climate became increasingly arid, killing off its primeval rain forests, and the...
...duckbill" di nosaur called Parasaurolophus, a 30-foot-long animal that lived about 75 million years ago during the Cretaceous period, near the end of the dinosaurs time on Earth. This plant-eating dinosaur, which appeared in the movie Jurassic...
...for the extinction of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period. Comparing the drop in NIH funding to a massextinction...finding alternate sources of funding. The current period of funding hardship will pass just as it did before...
...about 215 million years ago, during the Late Triassic period, and the last of the kind lived until the end of the Cretaceous period, 65 million years ago-when a worldwide cataclysm wiped out all dinosaurs except the birds. All sauropods were herbivorous...
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newspaper articles on: Cretaceous Period  - 81 results

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...Dinosaurs Exhibition, now open every day until August 31 2009. Get up close to some monsters of the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous, and discover the fascinating science and technology behind the award-winning TV series. Bring this voucher with you to Thinktank...
...who explains things in straightforward but never patronising language. Each era, from the Triassic to the Jurassic to the Cretaceous, has its own distinct inhabitants and habitat. The staging is simple but effective, with ferns, flowers and volcanoes springing...
...who explains things in straightforward but never patronising language. Each era, from the Triassic to the Jurassic to the Cretaceous, has its own distinct inhabitants and habitat. The staging is simple but effective, with ferns, flowers and volcanoes springing...
...and North America during the Cretaceous period 140 million years ago, is the...of Middle Jurassic and Early Cretaceous period species, including long-necked...dinosaurs from the Triassic period, just before the Jurassic period...
...Carcharodontosaurus Iguidensis lived in Africa in the Cretaceous period, around 95million years ago. Fossil-hunters have...that Morocco and Niger were separated by seas in the Cretaceous world so the species evolved differently." Mercifully...
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encyclopedia articles on: Cretaceous Period  - 27 results

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CRETACEOUS PERIOD krita sh s, third and last period...Geology of the Period The Lower Cretaceous Period At the beginning of the Lower Cretaceous...open since the Paleozoic. The Upper Cretaceous Period The Upper Cretaceous opened in...
...Logan Sea, toward the end of the period, was followed, probably in the Upper Jurassic but possibly in the Lower Cretaceous Period, by the deposition of the Morrison continental series of clays and sandstones, noted for its richness in fossil...
...period (198 million years ago), and the final Cretaceous period (65 million years ago). The most devastating was...best-known mass extinction is that at the end of the Cretaceous period, when the dinosaurs and many other plants and...
PACHYCEPHALOSAURUS pak isef losor s Gr.,=thick-headed lizard, bipedal herbivorous dinosaur of the late Cretaceous period, approximately 68 65 million years ago. Its distinguishing characteristic was a very heavy dome-shaped skull that...
TRICERATOPS triser tops Gr.,=three-horn face, genus of ornithischian quadruped dinosaurs of the late Cretaceous period. Because of some variations in sample fossils, it was thought at one time that there were as many as 16 different...
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