Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils, COV-DIO
Planet Earth has billions of years of history, from the time when it was an inhospitable ball of hot magma to when its surface stabilized into a variety of diverse zones capable of supporting many life-forms. Many are the species that lived through the various geologic eras and left a trace of their existence in the fossils that we study today. But Earth is never done settling, as we can see from the earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, and other phenomena manifested in Earth’s crust, oceans, and atmosphere.
Earth Science, Geologic Time & Fossils Encyclopedia Articles By Title
covellite, a sulfide mineral that is a copper ore, cupric sulfide (CuS). It typically occurs as an alteration product......
Creodonta, order of extinct carnivorous mammals first found as fossils in North American deposits of the Paleocene......
Crepicephalus, genus of trilobites (extinct arthropods) useful as an index fossil for Upper Cambrian rocks in North......
crepuscular rays, shafts of light which are seen just after the sun has set and which extend over the western sky......
Cretaceous Period, in geologic time, the last of the three periods of the Mesozoic Era. The Cretaceous began 145.0......
Cro-Magnon, population of early Homo sapiens dating from the Upper Paleolithic Period (c. 40,000 to c. 10,000 years......
crocoite, mineral consisting of lead chromate, PbCrO4, that is identical in composition to chrome yellow, the artificial......
Axel Fredrik Cronstedt was a Swedish mineralogist and chemist noted for his work on the chemistry of metallic elements......
crust–mantle model, postulation of conditions that would explain the phenomena observed about the crust, the mantle,......
Paul Crutzen was a Dutch chemist who received the 1995 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for demonstrating, in 1970, that......
cryolite, colourless to white halide mineral, sodium aluminum fluoride (Na3AlF6). It occurs in a large deposit......
CryoSat, European Space Agency satellite designed to study the effect of climate change on ice in Earth’s polar......
cryoseism, the sudden fracturing of soil or rock caused by rapid freezing of water in saturated ground. Such seismic......
Cryosol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).......
Cryptoblastus, extinct genus of blastoids, a primitive group of echinoderms related to the modern sea lilies, found......
Cryptolithus, genus of trilobites (extinct arthropods) found as fossils in Europe and North America in the Ordovician......
Cryptostomata, order of bryozoans (small colonial animals) found as fossils in rocks of Ordovician to Permian age......
crystalline rock, any rock composed entirely of crystallized minerals without glassy matter. Intrusive igneous......
crystallite, any of a type of microscopic body occurring in such glassy igneous rocks as obsidian and pitchstone.......
crystallography, branch of science that deals with discerning the arrangement and bonding of atoms in crystalline......
cubanite, a copper and iron sulfide mineral (CuFe2S3) that characteristically occurs with chalcopyrite or pyrrhotite......
cummingtonite, an amphibole mineral, an iron and magnesium silicate that occurs in metamorphic rocks. For chemical......
cuprite, soft, heavy, red oxide mineral (Cu2O) that is an important ore of copper. A secondary mineral often formed......
Joseph Augustine Cushman was a U.S. paleontologist known for his work on paleoecology as shown by Foraminifera......
Georges Cuvier was a French zoologist and statesman, who established the sciences of comparative anatomy and paleontology.......
Cyathocrinites, extinct genus of crinoids, or sea lilies, found as fossils in Silurian to Permian marine rocks......
Cycadeoidea, a genus of extinct seed plants that was common worldwide during the Early Cretaceous Epoch (145 million......
Cycadeoidophyta, an extinct division of plants with certain features in common with cycads (division Pinophyta)......
cyclogenesis, in meteorology, the process of extratropical cyclone development and intensification. Cyclogenesis......
cyclolysis, in meteorology, the process by which a cyclone weakens and deteriorates. The decay of an extratropical......
cyclone, any large system of winds that circulates about a centre of low atmospheric pressure in a counterclockwise......
cyclosilicate, compound with a structure in which silicate tetrahedrons (each of which consists of a central silicon......
cyclostrophic wind, wind circulation that results from a balance between the local atmospheric pressure gradient......
cyclothem, complex, repetitive stratigraphic succession of marine and nonmarine strata that are indicative of cyclic......
Cynognathus, genus of extinct advanced therapsids (mammals and their relatives) found as fossils in Lower Triassic......
Cystiphyllum, extinct genus of solitary corals found as fossils in Silurian and Devonian marine rocks (the Silurian......
cystoid, any member of an extinct class (Cystoidea) of primitive echinoderms (animals with a hard, calcareous external......
D region, lowest ionospheric region, at altitudes of about 70 to 90 km (40 to 55 miles). The D region differs from......
dacite, volcanic rock that may be considered a quartz-bearing variety of andesite. Dacite is primarily associated......
Dalgaranga Crater, small meteorite crater near Dalgaranga, Western Australia. Known earlier but not attributed......
Alexander Dalrymple was a Scottish geographer, the first hydrographer of the British Admiralty and proponent of......
John Dalton was an English meteorologist and chemist, a pioneer in the development of modern atomic theory. Dalton......
Reginald Aldworth Daly was a Canadian-American geologist who independently developed the theory of magmatic stoping,......
James D. Dana was an American geologist, mineralogist, and naturalist who, in explorations of the South Pacific,......
John Frederic Daniell was a British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell, which was a great......
André-Louis Danjon was a French astronomer noted for his important developments in astronomical instruments and......
Dansgaard-Oeschger event, any of several dramatic but fleeting global climatic swings characterized by a period......
Daonella, genus of extinct pelecypods (clams) useful as a guide, or index, fossil in Triassic rocks. The shell......
Charles Darwin was an English naturalist whose scientific theory of evolution by natural selection became the foundation......
dating, in geology, determining a chronology or calendar of events in the history of Earth, using to a large degree......
- Introduction
- Geochronology, Tectonic Rock, Cycle
- Sequence, Stratigraphy, Radiometric
- Correlation, Stratigraphy, Radiometric
- Geochronology, Geologic Column, Time Scale
- Isotopic, Geochronology, Principles
- Evaluation, Presentation, Schemes
- Isochron, Geochronology, Radiometric
- Model Ages, Geochronology, Radiometric
- Instruments, Procedures, Geochronology
- Isotopic, Geochronology, Methods
- Zircon, Uranium-Lead, Geochronology
- Rubidium-Strontium, Geochronology, Method
- Metamorphic Rocks, Geochronology, Age Estimation
- Rhenium-Osmium, Geochronology, Method
- Fission Track, Geochronology, Radioactive Decay
- Carbon-14, Cosmogenic, Geochronology
- Uranium Series, Disequilibrium, Geochronology
datolite, an uncommon mineral, calcium borosilicate, CaBSiO4(OH), that occurs as white or colourless veins and......
Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton was a French naturalist who was a pioneer in the fields of comparative anatomy and paleontology.......
Gabriel-Auguste Daubrée was a French geochemist and a pioneer in the application of experimental methods to the......
Sir T.W. Edgeworth David was a geologist noted for his monumental study of the geology of Australia. David served......
Thomas Davidson was a Scottish naturalist and paleontologist who became known as an authority on lamp shells, a......
William Morris Davis was a U.S. geographer, geologist, and meteorologist who founded the science of geomorphology,......
Sir John William Dawson was a Canadian geologist who made numerous contributions to paleobotany and extended the......
dawsonite, a carbonate mineral, NaAlCO3 (OH)2, that is probably formed by the decomposition of aluminous silicates.......
Arthur L. Day was a U.S. geophysicist known for his studies of the properties of rocks and minerals at very high......
Gerhard, Baron De Geer was a Swedish geologist, originator of the varve-counting method used in geochronology.......
deep-sea vent, hydrothermal (hot-water) vent formed on the ocean floor when seawater circulates through hot volcanic......
Deiphon, genus of trilobites (extinct arthropods) easily recognized in fossil form in Silurian rocks in North America......
delafossite, metallic, black copper and iron oxide (CuFeO2) that is found as a secondary mineral associated with......
Deltatheridium, a genus of extinct mammals found as fossils in rocks from Upper Cretaceous times (about 100–65.5......
Jean André Deluc was a Swiss-born British geologist and meteorologist whose theoretical work was influential on......
dendrochronology, the scientific discipline concerned with dating and interpreting past events, particularly paleoclimates......
Denisova Cave, site of paleoanthropological excavations in the Anui River valley roughly 60 miles (100 km) south......
Denisovan, member of a group of archaic humans who emerged about 370,000 years ago during the Pleistocene Epoch......
denticle, part of a conodont, a small toothlike fossil found in marine rocks representative of a long span of geologic......
descloizite, vanadate mineral containing lead, copper, and zinc that usually forms brownish red to blackish brown......
desert varnish, thin, dark red to black mineral coating (generally iron and manganese oxides and silica) deposited......
Nicolas Desmarest was a French geologist whose discovery of the volcanic origin of basalt disproved the Neptunist......
devitrification, process by which glassy substances change their structure into that of crystalline solids. Most......
Devonian Period, in geologic time, an interval of the Paleozoic Era that follows the Silurian Period and precedes......
dew, deposit of waterdrops formed at night by the condensation of water vapour from the air onto the surfaces of......
dew point, the temperature at which the atmosphere is saturated with water vapour, when it is cooled without changing......
diabase, fine- to medium-grained, dark gray to black intrusive igneous rock. It is extremely hard and tough and......
Diadectes, extinct genus of tetrapods closely related to the first amniotes (mammals, birds, reptiles, and their......
diagenesis, sum of all processes, chiefly chemical, by which changes in a sediment are brought about after its......
diamond, a mineral composed of pure carbon. It is the hardest naturally occurring substance known; it is also the......
diapir, (from Greek diapeirein, “to pierce”), geological structure consisting of mobile material that was forced......
Diarthrognathus, genus of extinct, advanced mammal-like reptiles found as fossils in Early Jurassic terrestrial......
diaspore, white or grayish, hard, glassy aluminum oxide mineral (HAlO2) that is associated with corundum in emery......
diastrophism, large-scale deformation of Earth’s crust by natural processes, which leads to the formation of continents......
Dictyoclostus, genus of extinct brachiopods, or lamp shells, that were common invertebrate forms in the shallow......
Dicuil was a monk, grammarian, and geographer whose work is important to the history of science and is a testament......
Didymograptus, genus of graptolites (an extinct group of colonial animals related to primitive chordates) found......
Dielasma, genus of extinct brachiopods, or lamp shells, that occur as fossils in rocks deposited in marine environments......
Robert S. Dietz was an American geophysicist and oceanographer who set forth a theory of seafloor spreading in......
dike, in geology, tabular or sheetlike igneous body that is often oriented vertically or steeply inclined to the......
Dikelocephalus, genus of trilobites (extinct arthropods) that is a useful guide fossil for the Late Cambrian rocks......
Dimetrodon, (genus Dimetrodon), extinct relative of primitive mammals that is characterized by a large, upright,......
Dimorphodon, (genus Dimorphodon), primitive flying reptiles found as fossils in European deposits from the Early......
William Henry Dines was a British meteorologist who invented instruments to measure atmospheric properties. The......
Dinichthys, extinct genus of arthrodires, i.e., primitive, armoured, fishlike animals known as placoderms that......
dinosaur, (clade Dinosauria), the common name given to a group of reptiles, often very large, that first appeared......
- Introduction
- Evolution, Classification, Extinction
- Archosaurs, Reptiles, Triassic
- Extinction Causes, Evidence, & Theory
- Asteroid Theory, Extinction, Fossils
- Extinction, Fossils, Evolution
- Herding, Socialization, Adaptation
- Endothermic, Thermoregulation, Homeothermy
- Reptiles, Extinction, Fossils
- Sauropods, Herbivores, Quadrupeds
- Theropods, Extinction, Fossils
- Tetanurae, Reptiles, Extinction
- Ornithischia, Herbivore, Reptile
- Pachycephalosaurs, Head-Butting, Herbivores
- Armored, Herbivorous, Ornithischians
- Armored, Herbivorous, Extinct
Dinosaur National Monument, desert area in northwestern Colorado and northeastern Utah, U.S., set aside in 1915......
Dinosaur Provincial Park, public park located in the badlands of southeastern Alberta, Canada. The nearly 29-square-mile......
dinosauromorph, any of a group of archosaurian reptiles that includes dinosaurs and all other reptiles bearing......
diorite, medium- to coarse-grained intrusive igneous rock that commonly is composed of about two-thirds plagioclase......