Stratigraphy The
Triassic is the first
period of the
Mesozoic era. It is subdivided into the
Lower,
Middle, and
Upper Triassic
series, which are further subdivided into
stages. The Induan is the first stage of the Lower Triassic, from 251.9 million to 249.9 million years ago, spanning the first 2 million years after the
Permian–Triassic extinction event. Stages can be defined globally or regionally. For global stratigraphic correlation, the
International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) ratifies global stages based on a
Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) from a single
formation (a
stratotype) identifying the lower boundary of the stage. The GSSP for the Induan is defined as the bottom of Bed 27c of the
Meishan Section, China, , with the appearance of the
conodont Hindeodus parvus as its primary marker (
biostratigraphy), and minimum zones (negative anomalies) of
13C and
18O (corresponding to the extinction event) as its secondary marker. Bed 27c comprises a medium-
bedded section of
limestone, overlain by
clay and a medium-bedded section of
dolomitic,
argillaceous calcimicrite. Calcimicrite is a type of limestone that contains more
micrite than
allochem, and the diameter of any particle measures less than 20
microns. The Induan is succeeded by the
Olenekian, whose GSSP is defined at the bottom of Bed A-2 of the
Mikin Formation near
Mud village, Spiti, India, with the appearance of the conodont
Neospathodus waageni and a 13C peak.
History There have been several propositions for the organization of the Triassic timescale. Most of the Triassic stages and sub-stages, which are still used today, were coined in an 1895 publication by Austro-Hungarian geologist
Johann August Georg Edmund Mojsisovics von Mojsvar, Austrian geologist
Carl Diener, and German geologist
Wilhelm Heinrich Waagen. They were defined using ammonite research conducted in large part by Mojsisovics and Diener in primarily Austria, Italy, and Bosnia; as well as Waagen's work in the Pakistani
Salt Range. They divided the Triassic into four series (from lowest to highest): the Scythian, Dinaric, Tyrolean, and Bavarian. The Scythian was divided (from lowest to highest) into the Brahmanian and Jakutian stages. The Brahmanian's lower boundary was defined by the appearance of the
ammonite Otoceras woodwardi in the
Himalayas (Austrian paleontologist
Carl Ludolf Griesbach had already proposed this ammonite demarcate the beginning of the Triassic in 1880), and its upper boundary by a section of
sandstone in the Salt Range characterized by
ceratite ammonites. In 1956, Soviet paleontologists Lubov D. Kiparisova and Yurij N. Popov decided to divide the Lower Triassic series into, what they coined, the Induan and Olenekian stages. The Induan honors the
Indus River, as they also bounded it using the same criteria and sites as Mojsisovics' Brahmanian in the Indus region, though they resided in
Siberia at the time. That is, the Induan is synonymous with the Brahmanian. In the 1970s, the ICS was founded to globally standardize stratigraphy. They erected the Subcommission on Triassic Stratigraphy (STS), which published its first timescale to Triassic stratigraphy in 1985. They divided it into the Lower, Middle, and Upper series; the Lower Triassic divided into the Induan and Olenekian stages; and the Induan further divided into the Griesbachian and Dienerian substages. In a revised 1991
timescale, they dropped several more of Tozer's considerations, and likewise did away with Induan substages entirely, though Tozer's original definition of them are still in use in ammonoid research. By the same decade, most geologists had moved away from ammonite zones, preferring conodonts. Consequently, in 1996, the STS moved the Induan's
GSSP to Meishan, China, with the appearance of
H. parvus. It was the first GSSP approved by the STS. ==Paleogeography==