Shenk & Muller rock units & two subdivisions based on
position in geologic time (time units & time stratigraphic
units)
North American Code of Stratigraphic Nomenclature 1983 AAPG Bull p.
841-845
formal & informal strat unit terms
stratum: a layer with certain unifying features, boundaries; can be
visible or subtle
stratigraphic unit: a stratum or assemblage of strata recognized as a
distinct entity when classifying the earth's lithologic sequence
based on different characters - units may not coincide
stratotype: original or designated representative of a specific
strata,
zone: a common minor strat. interval, especially important in
biostrat
interval: the body of strata between markers or time between
events
horizon: an interface indicative of a particular position in the
strat sequence, often a distinctive thin bed
correlation: show correspondence in character and position, different
types of correlation
composite stratotype: combination of several specified type intervals
of strata that collectively form a unit stratotype
boundary stratotype: specific point in a specific sequence of rock
strata that serves as the definition of the boundary of a unit
type locality: specific geographic location of the stratotype
type area or region: geographic territory surrounding the
stratotype
variety of strato types
holo-: original designated by author at time of establishment; "the
definition"
para-: supplementary type used in original definition by original
author as an aid
neo-: new type, replaces older type that was destroyed or
nullified
lecto-: selected later in absence of of adequate designated
holotype
hypo-: reference or auxiliary section, designated to extend knowledge
of a unit or boundary already established by a type into a new
geographic area or facies
How to describe/designate a type section
I. describe location - map, air photo location, make it
accessible; II. keep it simple structurally - complications cause
errors; III. geologic description: 1. thickness, 2. lithology, 3.
paleontology, 4. mineralogy, 5. structure, 6. geomorphic expression;
IV. describe boundaries in detail with reason; V. include a strat
column, photograph, XS etc.; VI. publish the work so others know
about it
lithozone: informal unit
lithohorizon: a surface of change, usually on a boundary or marker
bed, very thin
formation: the basic lithostrat unit, intermediate in size (rank),
has a type section, the lithostrat column should be divisible into
formations; formal unit, variable thickness (<m to 100's m),
amount of lithologic change is unspecified - complexity of geology is
variable; prime consideration are mappability & putting into
XS
Fm. Name: includes geographic term & dominant lithology
Group: formal name for 2 or more fms. with something in common, type
section for group is type sections of constituent fms., it is not
required to group fms into groups, group name should include a
geographic feature near the type sections; generally can't
characterize lithology of a group - exception is CRB's, wedging out
can can reduce a group to a fm
member: formal name for parts of a fm; fms can have 0,1, or more
mbrs, no formal fixed standard for thickness or extent, mbrs are
lithologic distinct parts of a fm
bed: the smallest of the formal units, typically a few cm to few
meters thick, must be distinguishable from layer above & below
it
complex: lithostrat unit of diverse lithology & structurally
complex; now covered by lithodemic stratigraphy - primarily intrusive
, highly deformed/metamorphosed, most lack stratification, usually
doesn't conform to superposition
contact: is what lithostrat boundaries are termed, unconformities are
good contacts if visible, angular unconformities &
nonconformities are easy to see in field, disconformities are often
difficult to see in the field - may need paleo to find