Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Epoch (geology)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

In geochronology, an epoch is a subdivision of the geologic timescale that is longer than an age and shorter than a period. We are currently living in the Holocene Epoch of the Quaternary Period. Rock layers deposited during an epoch are called a series. Series are subdivisions of the stratigraphic column that, like epochs, are subdivisions of the geologic timescale. Like other geochronological divisions, epochs are normally separated by significant changes in the rock layers to which they correspond.

Epochs are most commonly used for the younger Cenozoic Era, where a greater collection of fossils has been found and paleontologists have more detailed knowledge of the events that occurred during those times. They are less commonly referred to for the other eras and eons, since less fossil evidence exists that allows us to form a clearer view of those time periods.

List of series (epochs) in the Phanerozoic eon

List is ordered from youngest to oldest and subdivided based on era and period.

Cenozoic

  • Quaternary
  • Holocene
  • Pleistocene
  • Neogene
  • Pliocene
  • Miocene
  • Paleogene
  • Oligocene
  • Eocene
  • Paleocene
  • Mesozoic

  • Cretaceous
  • Late (Upper)
  • Early (Lower)
  • Jurassic
  • Late (Upper)
  • Middle
  • Early (Lower)
  • Triassic
  • Late (Upper)
  • Middle
  • Early (Lower)
  • Paleozoic

  • Permian
  • Lopingian
  • Guadalupian
  • Cisuralian
  • Carboniferous
  • Pennsylvanian
  • Mississippian
  • Devonian
  • Late (Upper)
  • Middle
  • Early (Lower)
  • Silurian
  • Přídolí
  • Ludlow
  • Wenlock
  • Llandovery
  • Ordovician
  • Late (Upper)
  • Middle
  • Early (Lower)
  • Cambrian
  • Late (Upper)/Furongian
  • Middle
  • Early (Lower)
  • References

    Epoch (geology) Wikipedia