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stratigrafiche

Stratigrafiche refers to the stratigraphic aspects within the field of stratigraphy, describing elements such as stratigraphic units, beds, and relationships that pertain to layered rock records. In Italian usage, the term is often an adjective modifying nouns like unità stratigrafiche (stratigraphic units) or relazioni stratigrafiche (stratigraphic relationships).

Stratigraphy is the science that studies the order and relative position of strata and their relation to

Key subfields include lithostratigraphy (rock type and unit boundaries), biostratigraphy (fossil content used for age proxies),

Applications of stratigraphy span oil and gas exploration, groundwater assessment, mineral resource evaluation, environmental geology, and

geological
time.
Its
aims
include
reconstructing
past
depositional
environments,
correlating
rock
units
across
geographic
areas,
and
interpreting
the
geological
history
of
a
region.
The
concept
of
stratigrafiche
thus
encompasses
the
descriptive
and
interpretive
work
that
ties
together
rock
layers
into
a
coherent
historical
sequence.
chronostratigraphy
(defining
time-rock
boundaries),
and
sequence
stratigraphy
(planning
sedimentary
sequences).
Other
techniques
such
as
chemostratigraphy,
magnetostratigraphy,
and
cyclostratigraphy
support
age
determinations
and
correlation.
Data
sources
range
from
surface
outcrops
and
road
cuts
to
boreholes,
cores,
and
seismic
reflection
surveys.
archaeology,
where
stratigraphic
sequences
help
reconstruct
site
formation
processes
and
chronology.
Historically,
stratigraphy
developed
in
the
18th
and
19th
centuries
alongside
the
geological
time
scale
and
principles
such
as
faunal
succession,
enabling
systematic
description
and
correlation
of
strata
across
regions.