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| This period is part of the Paleozoic era. |
| Permian |
| Carboniferous |
| Devonian |
| Silurian |
| Ordovician |
| Cambrian |
The Cambrian is a major division of the geologic timescale that begins about 542 million years before the present (BP) at the end of the Proterozoic eon and ended about 490 million years BP with the beginning of the Ordovician period. It is the first period of the Paleozoic era of the Phanerozoic eon. The Cambrian is the earliest period in whose rocks are found numerous large, distinctly-fossilizable multicellular organisms that are more complex than sponges or medusoids. During this time, roughly fifty separate major groups of organisms or " phyla", including almost all the basic body plans of modern animals, emerged suddenly, in most cases without evident precursors. This radiation of animal phyla is referred to as the Cambrian explosion.
Cambria is the Roman name for north Wales, a place of extensive Cambrian-age rocks investigated by Adam Sedgwick in the 1830s. Eventually as the stratigraphic series was filled out, the youngest 'Cambrian' came to overlap the oldest parts of the ' Silurian' sequence of strataInterstate road cutthrough limestone and shale strataeastern Tennessee In geology and related fields, a stratum (plural: strata is a layer of rock or soil with internally consistent characteristics that distinguishes it from contiguous layers. Each layer that had been identified by Sir Roderick MurchisonSir Roderick Impey Murchison ( February 19, 1792 October 22, 1871), was a powerful British geologist who first described and investigated the Silurian era. He was born at Tarradale, in Ross-shire, Scotland, the son of Kenneth Murchison (died 1796). He att. In 1879, Charles LapworthCharles Lapworth ( September 20, 1842- March 13, 1920) was a 19th century English geologist. Born at Faringdon, Berkshire, and trained as a teacher, he settled in the Scottish border region, where he investigated the previously little-known fossil fauna o defined an ' Ordovician' period that included the overlapping beds.
The Cambrian period follows after the NeoproterozoicThe Neoproterozoic is a period of time roughly from 1000 million years before the present to 544 million years before the present. The exact boundaries may vary somewhat with the person using the term. The Neoproterozoic covers a period of time in which f and is followed by the Ordovician period. The Cambrian is classically divided into three stages -- a lower (Caerfai or Waucoban), middle (St Davids or Albertian) and upper (Merioneth or Croixan) Cambrian. The faunal stageFaunal stages are a subdivision of geologic time used primarily by paleontologists who study fossils rather than by geologists who study rock formations. Typically, a faunal stage will consist of a series of rocks that contain similar fossils. There wills from youngest to oldest are: