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Encyclopedia > Epeiric Sea

An epeiric sea--also known as an epicontinental sea--is a large but shallow body of salt water that lies over a part of a continent. Usually associated with the marine transgressions of the early Cenozoic and other eras, they can be warm or cold; indeed, several were present at the end of the last Ice Age. Modern examples are the Persian Gulf, the North Sea, and Hudson Bay. It has been suggested that Geographic Realms be merged into this article or section. ... Transgression refers to an action that breaks some code or set of rules, that is, goes across or against basic assumptions or norms. ... Variations in CO2, temperature and dust from the Vostok ice core over the last 400 000 years For the animated movie, see Ice Age (movie). ... Map of the Persian Gulf. ... The North Sea is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean, located between the coasts of Norway and Denmark in the east, the coast of the British Isles in the west, and the German, Dutch, Belgian and French coasts in the south. ... Hudson Bay, Canada. ...


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Epeiric Sea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (103 words)
An epeiric sea--also known as an epicontinental sea--is a large but shallow body of salt water that lies over a part of a continent.
Usually associated with the marine transgressions of the early Cenozoic and other eras, they can be warm or cold; indeed, several were present at the end of the last Ice Age.
Modern examples are the Persian Gulf, the North Sea, and Hudson Bay.
Middle and Late Ordovician Epeiric Sea Circulation, Environmental Change, and Biotic Turnover: Model and Data Synthesis (750 words)
Although rare today because of the overall lowstand of sea level, epeiric seas were widespread in the past during highstands of sea level, such as the early and middle Paleozoic, and for many times provide the only record we have of the marine realm.
Given the importance of epeiric seas for the record of global marine diversity and given the lack of modern analogues for epeiric seas, a systematic approach to the study of these ancient systems is warranted.
The main goals of the study are 1) to apply a quantitative circulation model to Middle and Late Ordovician epeiric seas of Laurentia to test various hypotheses of circulation and 2) to identify mechanisms of rapid oceanographic change that caused faunal extinction and immigration events.
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