
thumb|200px|right|Horseshoe Canyon Formations exposed in Horseshoe Canyon (Alberta)|Horseshoe Canyon near [[Drumheller, Alberta.]] thumb|200px|right|Oxfordian (Upper Jurassic) cyclic sediments at Péry-Reuchenette, near Tavannes, kanton Bern, Switzerland. Alternating layers are limestone (light, more competent) and [[marl/clay; dominant cycle is the 200000 year-cycle.]]
thumb|200px|right|Horseshoe Canyon Formations exposed in Horseshoe Canyon (Alberta)|Horseshoe Canyon near [[Drumheller, Alberta.]] thumb|200px|right|Oxfordian (Upper Jurassic) cyclic sediments at Péry-Reuchenette, near Tavannes, kanton Bern, Switzerland. Alternating layers are limestone (light, more competent) and [[marl/clay; dominant cycle is the 200000 year-cycle.]]
In stratigraphy and geology, an eonothem is the totality of rock strata laid down in the stratigraphic record deposited during a certain eon of the continuous geologic timescale. The eonothem is not to be confused with the eon itself, which is a corresponding division of geologic time spanning a specific number of (hundreds of millions of) years, during which rocks were formed that are classified within the eonothem. Eonothems have the same names as their corresponding eons, which means during the history of the Earth only four eonothems were formed. Oldest to newest these are the Hadean, Archean, Proterozoic, and Phanerozoic. A rock stratum, fossil or feature present in the "upper Phanerozoic" eonothem would therefore have originated within the "later Phanerozoic" eon. In practice, the rock column is discontinuous:
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).