Animikie Series, division of Precambrian rocks and time in North America (the Precambrian occurred from 3.96 billion to 540 million years ago). The Animikie Series, the uppermost division of the Huronian System, overlies rocks of the Cobalt Series.
The Animikie Series was named for exposures along the north shore of Lake Superior, in the Thunder Bay area (animiki is the Chippewa word for “thunder”); Animikian rocks occur in Ontario, northern Michigan, northern Wisconsin, and northeastern Minnesota. In the Port Arthur area, Animikian rocks overlie pre-Huronian metamorphic (altered) rocks; rocks of the Cobalt Series are absent. The Animikie Series begins with a basal conglomerate, which is succeeded by very thick sequences of sandstones, shales, and limestones. Animikie rocks are rich in iron ores and provide many important sources for mining. The Mesabi, Gunflint, and Cuyuna ranges are Animikian in age and provide rich deposits of taconite, a mineral assemblage consisting of the iron-containing minerals hematite, siderite, pyrite, and magnetite, and others. Algal structures known as stromatolites, concentric and finely laminated, are common in Animikian limestones. Animikian rocks are commonly intruded by igneous masses but are not strongly folded or faulted.