Geology

Geology
The 366 daily episodes in 2014 were chronological snapshots of earth history, beginning with the Precambrian in January and on to the Cenozoic in December. You can find them all in the index in the right sidebar. In 2015, the daily episodes for each month were assembled into monthly packages (link in index at right), and a few new episodes were posted from 2015-18. You may be interested in a continuation of this blog on Substack at this location. Thanks for your interest!

Monday, September 1, 2014

September 1. The Mesozoic begins





The three eras of geologic time after the Precambrian are sometimes called the Phanerozoic Eon – that name means “visible life.” The Paleozoic, which ended yesterday, means “ancient life,’ Mesozoic, beginning today, means “middle life,” and the Cenozoic Era, which we’ll cover in December, means “recent life.” This is a good time to repeat my disclaimer that we are NOT going through earth history at a proper scale. If we were, we’d be in the Precambrian until mid-November, and it would be a pretty boring commentary. So I have arbitrarily assigned January to all of the Precambrian, February through August to the periods of the Paleozoic, September, October, and November to the Mesozoic, and December represents the Cenozoic Era. 

So today we begin the Mesozoic, sometimes called the Age of Reptiles or the Age of Dinosaurs, but lots of other living things diversified during this time and we’ll try to touch on many of them in the coming three months.

* * *

On September 1, 1923, at two minutes to noon, a massive earthquake shook Tokyo and Yokohama, Japan. Its magnitude is given as 7.9 on the moment magnitude scale, and the estimated death toll was at least 143,000, making it one of the deadliest quakes in history. A strong typhoon hit the area at about the same time – and it has been suggested that the heavy storm surge from the typhoon might have put enough pressure on an already highly stressed fault that it could have triggered the quake – but in any event, the fault must have been ready to break already. Japan sits at the complex boundaries between four tectonic plates – the Pacific, Philippine, Eurasian, and a branch of the North American Plate called the Okhotsk Plate. At Tokyo, the northern point of the oceanic Philippine plate is subducting beneath both Eurasia and this extension of North America – a real mess, tectonically, so it’s not much of a surprise that the area is prone to great earthquakes.
—Richard I. Gibson

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