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Features that define a facies can include collections of fossils, sequences of rock layers, or the occurrence of specific minerals. Sedimentary rocks deposited at the same time, but representing different facies belong to a single chronostratigraphic unit (see stratigraphy). But these same rocks may belong to different lithostratigraphic units. For example, beach sand is deposited at the same time that mud is deposited further offshore. The beach sand eventually turns to sandstone while the mud turns to shale. The resulting sandstone and shale strata comprise two different facies, one representing the beach environment and the other the offshore environment, formed at the same time; the sandstone and shale belong to the same chronostratigraphic unit but distinct lithostratigraphic units.
Blue stands for the Pacific Ocean. The yellow stripe represents the Equator. The points of the star symbolize the island's 12 original tribes. Effective date: 31 January 1968.
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