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   » » Wiki: Llandovery Epoch
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In the geological timescale, the Llandovery Epoch (from 443.8 ± 1.5 million years ago to 433.4 ± 0.8 million years ago) occurred at the beginning of the Period. The Llandoverian Epoch follows the massive Ordovician-Silurian extinction events, which led to a large decrease in and an opening up of .

Widespread building started in this period and continued into the when rising water temperatures are thought to have bleached out the by killing their photo .

The Llandoverian Epoch ended with the which killed off 50% of species, and 80% of the global species.


Beginning of Silurian
The end of the Ordovician–Silurian extinction event occurred when melting glaciers caused the sea level to rise and eventually stabilize. Biodiversity, with the sustained re-flooding of continental shelves at the onset of the , rebounded within the surviving orders.

Following the major loss of diversity as the end-Ordovician, Silurian communities were initially less complex and broader niched. Highly faunas, which characterized the Late Ordovician, were replaced by faunas that were amongst the most cosmopolitan in the , biogeographic patterns that persisted throughout most of the Silurian.

These end Ordovician–Silurian events had nothing like the long-term impact of the Permian–Triassic and Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction events. Nevertheless, a large number of taxa disappeared from the Earth over a short time interval, eliminating and changing diversity.


GSSP
The epoch was named after in Wales.
(2025). 9780521786737, Cambridge University Press.
The GSSP for the Silurian is located in a section at Dob's Linn (southern Scotland) in an artificial excavation created just north of the Linn Branch Stream. Two units (formations) occur near the boundary.
(2025). 9780521786737, Cambridge University Press.
The lower is the Hartfell Shale ( thick), consisting chiefly of pale gray mudstone with subordinate black and several meta-.
(2025). 9780521786737, Cambridge University Press.
Above this is the thick Birkhill Shale, which consist predominantly of black graptolitic shale with subordinate gray mudstones and meta-bentonites.
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