megacyclothem

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English

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Etymology

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From mega- +‎ cyclothem. Coined by American scientist Raymond C. Moore in 1936.[1][2]

Noun

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megacyclothem (plural megacyclothems)

  1. (geology) A collection of related cyclothems

References

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  1. ^ Moore, Raymond C. (1936 August 31) “Stratigraphic Classification of the Pennsylvanian Rocks of Kansas”, in Bulletin of the University of Kansas[1], volume 66, number 22, State Geological Survey of Kansas, archived from the original on 2023-03-30, page 29:
    This repeated succession of cyclothems of differing character indicates a rhythm of larger order than that shown in the individual cycles and suggests the desirability of a term to designate a combination of related cyclothems. The word "megacyclothem" will be used in this sense to define a cycle of cyclothems.
  2. ^ Weller, J. Marvin (1958 March) “Cyclothems and Larger Sedimentary Cycles of the Pennsylvanian”, in The Journal of Geology[2], volume 66, number 2, The University of Chicago Press, →JSTOR, page 195:
    The Kansas sequence, with its complex succession of marine limestones, was interpreted as recording several transgressive-regressive cycles, each of which was likened to a cyclothem. Because it was believed to correspond to several, perhaps as many as five, incomplete cyclothems, it was named a megacyclothem (Moore, 1936, p. 29).