Abstract
AbstractAn appealing strategy for reconstructing the timing and tempo of paleoenvironmental change from sedimentary strata is to linearly interpolate between marker beds of known age. This method requires significant assumptions, but more advanced age modeling methods are usually not feasible. We used experiments to explore how changes in sedimentary processes invalidate these assumptions and affect estimates of time from the strata. When sedimentary processes changed to favor widespread deposition, we found that measuring time linearly systematically overestimated time duration from the resulting strata (time dilation) and misestimated the beginning and end of geologic intervals (phase shifting). When simple age models must be used for sedimentary strata, geologic evidence for transient changes in spatial sediment dispersal may help identify sections of dilated and shifted time, and better resolve time in sedimentary strata.
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