gunflint$33171$ - traduction vers néerlandais
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gunflint$33171$ - traduction vers néerlandais

GEOLOGIC FORMATION IN MINNESOTA AND ONTARIO
Gunflint microfossils; Gunflint Microfossils; Gunflint fossils; Gunflint Chert; Gunflint formation

gunflint      
n. keisteen van kanon (in verouderd wapentuig)
flint stone         
  • [[Neolithic]] flint axe, about 31 cm long
  • Assorted reproduction [[firesteel]]s typical of Roman to Medieval period
  • in}} long, weighing 171 grams
  • A ferrocerium “flint” spark lighter in action
  • order=flip}} long
  • Silicified remains of algae and silica pseudomorph after halite in flint. Pebble of Loire near Marcigny, France. Image width: about 5 mm.
  • Bottle kilns traditionally used for calcining flint
SEDIMENTARY ROCK, CHERT VARIETY
Flint stone; Flints; Gunflint; Natural flint
vuursteen

Définition

Flint
·noun Anything extremely hard, unimpressible, and unyielding, like flint.
II. Flint ·noun A piece of flint for striking fire;
- formerly much used, ·esp. in the hammers of gun locks.
III. Flint ·noun A massive, somewhat impure variety of quartz, in color usually of a gray to brown or nearly black, breaking with a conchoidal fracture and sharp edge. It is very hard, and strikes fire with steel.

Wikipédia

Gunflint chert

The Gunflint chert (1.88 Ga) is a sequence of banded iron formation rocks that are exposed in the Gunflint Range of northern Minnesota and northwestern Ontario along the north shore of Lake Superior. The Gunflint Chert is of paleontological significance, as it contains evidence of microbial life from the Paleoproterozoic. The Gunflint Chert is composed of biogenic stromatolites. At the time of its discovery in the 1950s, it was the earliest form of life discovered and described in scientific literature, as well as the earliest evidence for photosynthesis. The black layers in the sequence contain microfossils that are 1.9 to 2.3 billion years in age. Stromatolite colonies of cyanobacteria that have converted to jasper are found in Ontario. The banded ironstone formation consists of alternating strata of iron oxide-rich layers interbedded with silica-rich zones. The iron oxides are typically hematite or magnetite with ilmenite, while the silicates are predominantly cryptocrystalline quartz as chert or jasper, along with some minor silicate minerals.

The Gunflint Iron Formation (exposed as the Gunflint Range) spans northwestern Ontario and northern Minnesota along the shores of Lake Superior. The type locality of the Gunflint Iron Formation is at Schreiber, ON near Lake Superior’s Thunder Bay.

Geologist Stanley A. Tyler first examined the area in 1953 and noticed its red-colored stromatolites. He also sampled a jet-black chert layer which, when observed petrographically, revealed some lifelike small spheres, rods and filaments less than 10 micrometres in size. Elso Barghoorn, a paleobotanist at Harvard, subsequently looked at these same samples and concluded that "they were indeed structurally preserved unicellular organisms." In 1965 the two scientists published their landmark finding and named the first variety of Gunflint flora. This created an academic "stampede" to explore Precambrian microfossils from similar Proterozoic environments. While older microfossils have since been described, the Gunflint microfauna is a historic geologic discovery and remains one of the most robust and diverse microfaunal fossil assemblages from the Precambrian.