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New Zealand Geological Timescale

Geological timescales are the frameworks that geologists use to assign ages to units of rock. This is probably one of the most fundamental concepts in geology and its allied fields, including paleontology and evolutionary studies. It is a basic requirement for many things, such as:

• assigning geological age to rocks, fossils and economic minerals;

• calibrating the rates of geological processes such as fault displacement and plate rotation, submergence, uplift and erosion of the land, earthquake frequency and volcanic activity;

• measuring rates of climate change, sea-level change, biodiversity change and organic evolution;

• the search for natural resources.

Age indicators used to develop timescales are various, but the oldest and still most frequently used approach is to recognise rocks of similar age by the fossils they contain. The first geological timescales were developed in Europe, and these are gradually being consolidated into an international geological timescale which is expanded and updated every few years. Many areas of the world, however, have highly endemic fossils – just as countries like New Zealand have highly endemic plant and animal biotas today – and it is hard to relate the geology of these places to the international framework.


Like many of these places, New Zealand uses the international scheme for the major units (Jurassic, Cretaceous, and so on) and for rocks which are not well represented in our own country, but adopts a more convenient local scheme, based on our own endemic fossils, for the smaller time divisions. Our New Zealand geological timescale has been under development since the earliest days of geological research in the country, in the late nineteenth century, although perhaps the greatest advances occurred through the 1940s to 1960s. A huge amount of related knowledge was collected together and published in 2004, in a monograph edited by Roger Cooper and published by GNS Science.

Access is available online from the GNS Science web site.


Like all scientific endeavours, timescales are continually revised as new knowledge comes to hand. Most commonly, these revisions apply to the absolute age calibrations of the time units. Although fossils are a useful way to quickly tell that two different bodies of rock are of similar age, they cannot – on their own – tell us exactly how old that is. Various events, such as the “first” (oldest) occurrence of a particular fossil shell, have to be calibrated using some technique, such as radiometric dating, to find out how many years ago the event took place. Unfortunately, calibration usually requires that numerous factors happen to be “just right” in order to be accurate. Consequently, new data comes to hand slowly, over many years.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.21420/F49B-4G37

Cite data as:

GNS Science. (2004). New Zealand Geological Timescale [Data set]. GNS Science. https://doi.org/10.21420/F49B-4G37

Simple

Date (Creation)
2004-01-15
Status
On going
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

GNS Science

paleo@gns.cri.nz

Point of contact
Maintenance and update frequency
Irregular
Keywords
  • stratigraphy

  • chronostratigraphy

  • geologic age

  • New Zealand

  • Cenozoic

  • Mesozoic

  • Paleozoic

  • timescale

Classification
Unclassified
Use constraints
Copyright
Other constraints

This material is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 (CC BY 4.0) Licence. For more details visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Where the data are used in a figure GNS Science requests attribution in the following manner: (C) GNS Science.

Language
English
Topic category
  • Geoscientific information
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Begin date
1800-01-01
Supplemental Information

Publications/References


JI Raine, AG Beu, AF Boyes, HJ Campbell, RA Cooper, JS Crampton, MP Crundwell, CJ Hollis, HEG Morgans & N Mortimer (2015) New Zealand Geological Timescale NZGT 2015/1, New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 58:4, 398-403, DOI: 10.1080/00288306.2015.1086391

Distribution format
Name Version

pdf

OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

https://www.gns.cri.nz/Home/Our-Science/Land-and-Marine-Geoscience/Paleontology/Online-Resources/New-Zealand-s-Geological-Timescale

New Zealand Geological Timescale Website

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://huta22.gns.cri.nz/metadata/srv/api/records/5b2d5287-40e9-48a2-9d59-b64e99d6f796/attachments/NZ%20Geological%20Timescale%202015%20table.pdf

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://huta22.gns.cri.nz/metadata/srv/api/records/5b2d5287-40e9-48a2-9d59-b64e99d6f796/attachments/Timescale_Card_2015_poster%20(1).pdf
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

The 2004 timescale has been revised twice so far, in 2010 (Hollis et al.) and most recently in a study led by Ian Raine in 2015. This revision was based on the then-latest recalibration of the International Geological Timescale by Gradstein et al. (2012) and is consistent with the International Chronostratigraphic Chart 2014/10 (Cohen et al. 2014).

Metadata

File identifier
5b2d5287-40e9-48a2-9d59-b64e99d6f796 XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Hierarchy level name

Dataset

Date stamp
2022-01-31T15:27:55
Metadata standard name

ISO 19115:2003/19139

Metadata standard version

1.0

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

GNS Science

datamanagement@gns.cri.nz

Point of contact
 
 

Overviews

overview

Spatial extent

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Keywords


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