Rhaetian$508270$ - meaning and definition. What is Rhaetian$508270$
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What (who) is Rhaetian$508270$ - definition

THIRD AND LAST AGE OF THE LATE TRIASSIC EPOCH
Rhaetian Stage; Rhaetian age
  • Hallstatt, Austria]]
  • The magnetostratigraphic sequence of the Oyuklu section in Turkey, which Gallet ''et al.'' (2007) used to support a "short Rhaetian" hypothesis

Rhaetian         
·adj & ·noun Rhetain.
Rhaetian Alps         
MOUNTAIN RANGE IN THE CENTRAL-EASTERN ALPS
Rätische Alpen; Rhetian Alps; Ratische Alpen; Raetische Alpen; Rhaetian alps
The Rhaetian Alps (; ) are a mountain range of the Eastern Alps. The SOIUSA classification system divides them into the Western and Eastern Rhaetian Alps, while the Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps places most of the Rhaetian subranges within the Western Limestone Alps.
Rhaetian (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Raetian (disambiguation)
The Raetians or Rhaetians were some of the most powerful and warlike of the Alpine tribes. Rhaetian may refer to:

Wikipedia

Rhaetian

The Rhaetian is the latest age of the Triassic Period (in geochronology) or the uppermost stage of the Triassic System (in chronostratigraphy). It was preceded by the Norian and succeeded by the Hettangian (the lowermost stage or earliest age of the Jurassic). The base of the Rhaetian lacks a formal GSSP, though candidate sections include Steinbergkogel in Austria (since 2007) and Pignola-Abriola in Italy (since 2016). The end of the Rhaetian (and the base of the overlying Hettangian Stage) is more well-defined. According to the current ICS (International Commission on Stratigraphy) system, the Rhaetian ended 201.4 ± 0.2 Ma (million years ago).

In 2010, the base of the Rhaetian (i.e. the Norian-Rhaetian boundary) was voted to be defined based on the first appearance of Misikella posthernsteini, a marine conodont. However, there is still much debate over the age of this boundary, as well as the evolution of M. posthernsteini. The most comprehensive source of precise age data for the Late Triassic comes from astrochronologically-constrained terrestrial strata of the Newark basin in the eastern United States. Correlating the Newark basin to marine sections encompassing the Norian-Rhaetian boundary is mainly achieved via magnetostratigraphy, though such correlations are subject to debate and revision. Some authors have suggested that the Rhaetian lasted less than 5 million years using magnetostratigraphy from Turkish strata and a presumed gap or unconformity in Newark strata. However, both of these lines of evidence have been met with skepticism.

A commonly cited approximation of 208.5 Ma (used by the ICS since 2012) is based on a "long-Rhaetian" hypothesis reconstructed from the Steinbergkogel GSSP candidate. Most recently, aspects of the "short-Rhaetian" hypothesis have been revived by radiometric dating of Peruvian bivalve extinctions and magnetostratigraphy at the Pignola-Abriola GSSP candidate. These studies suggest that the base of the Rhaetian was close to 205.5 Ma.

During the Rhaetian, Pangaea began to break up, though the Atlantic Ocean was not yet formed.