Journal Article10.1007/S13358-015-0074-1
Neogene molluscs, shallow marine paleoenvironments, and chronostratigraphy of the Guajira Peninsula, Colombia
Austin J.W. Hendy,Austin J.W. Hendy,Douglas S. Jones,Federico Moreno,Federico Moreno,Vladimir Zapata,Vladimir Zapata,Carlos Jaramillo +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present preliminary results from paleoenvironmental, biostratigraphic, and strontium isotope chronostrigraphic analyses of sediments and fossils from the Uitpa, Jimol, Castilletes, and Ware formations found in Cocinetas Basin.
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Abstract: The Neogene sedimentary fill of the Cocinetas Basin in northern Colombia preserves a rich record of marine invertebrates and can be analyzed in the context of a high-resolution stratigraphy and excellent chronostratigraphy. Molluscan fossils are highly diverse and often well preserved, offering a window into the rapidly changing paleoenvironments and biogeography of northern South America during parts of the Early to Middle Miocene and latest Pliocene to Pleistocene. Before the evolutionary and biogeographic implications of these fossils can be understood, however, their associated depositional environments and geologic ages must be determined. Here, we present preliminary results from paleoenvironmental, biostratigraphic, and strontium isotope chronostratigraphic analyses of sediments and fossils from the Uitpa, Jimol, Castilletes, and Ware formations found in Cocinetas Basin. The basal unit in the Neogene succession, the Uitpa Formation, comprises mudstones redeposited sandstones and molluscs typical of bathyal to outer shelf environments at its base. It is a shallowing-up sequence and is conformable with the overlying Jimol Formation, which comprises coarse-grained lithic calcarenite, coquina, and mudstone that represent a regressive–transgressive–regressive sequence. This sequence includes foreshore and transition zone through lower inner shelf environments, but generally poorly preserved invertebrate assemblages. The conformably overlying Castilletes Formation contains a varied suite of depositional environments with better-developed shell beds and thicker successions of intervening siltstone. A significant unconformity exists between the Castilletes Formation and the overlying Ware Formation, which represents a deltaic to coastal shoreface deposition environment, rich in shallow marine molluscs from a variety of ecotopes. Biostratigraphic assessment and strontium isotopic results from the Jimol and Castilletes formations indicate that these units contain fossils of latest Early Miocene through Middle Miocene age, while those of the Ware are approximately Late Pliocene in age. These results help to place the shallow marine assemblages of Cocinetas Basin into a wider geologic context that aids our understanding of how these faunas relate to the broader evolutionary and biogeographic history of the southern Caribbean during the Neogene. Additionally, the isotope dating and paleoecology of this fauna help to place co-occurring terrestrial and aquatic vertebrate assemblages into a local paleoenvironmental and chronostratigraphic framework.
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Citations
A 60-million-year Cenozoic history of western Amazonian ecosystems in Contamana, eastern Peru
Pierre-Olivier Antoine,M. Alejandra Abello,Sylvain Adnet,Ali J. Altamirano Sierra,Patrice Baby,Guillaume Billet,Myriam Boivin,Ysabel Calderon,Adriana Magdalena Candela,Jules Chabain,Fernando Corfu,Darin A. Croft,Morgan Ganerød,Carlos Jaramillo,Sebastian Klaus,Laurent Marivaux,Rosa E. Navarrete,Maeva J. Orliac,Francisco Parra,María Encarnación Pérez,François Pujos,Jean-Claude Rage,Anthony Ravel,Céline Robinet,Martin Roddaz,Julia V. Tejada-Lara,Julia V. Tejada-Lara,Julia V. Tejada-Lara,Jorge Vélez-Juarbe,Jorge Vélez-Juarbe,Frank P. Wesselingh,Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi,Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi +32 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive survey of the Cenozoic deposits along the Quebrada Cachiyacu near Contamana in Peruvian Amazonia is presented in this paper, where 34 fossil-bearing localities identified have yielded a diversity of fossil remains, including vertebrates, mollusks, arthropods, plant fossils, and microorganisms, ranging from the early Paleocene to the late Miocene-?Pliocene (>20 successive levels).
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Revised stratigraphy of Neogene strata in the Cocinetas Basin, La Guajira, Colombia
Federico Moreno,Federico Moreno,Austin J.W. Hendy,Austin J.W. Hendy,Luis Quiroz,Luis Quiroz,Natalia Hoyos,Natalia Hoyos,Douglas S. Jones,Vladimir Zapata,Vladimir Zapata,S. Zapata,Gustavo A. Ballen,Edwin A. Cadena,Edwin A. Cadena,Andrés L. Cárdenas,Andrés L. Cárdenas,Jorge D. Carrillo-Briceño,Jorge D. Carrillo-Briceño,Juan D. Carrillo,Juan D. Carrillo,D. Delgado-Sierra,Jaime Escobar,Jaime Escobar,José Ignacio Martínez,Camila Martínez,Camila Martínez,Camilo Montes,J. Moreno,J. Moreno,N. Pérez,N. Pérez,Rodolfo Sánchez,Catalina Suarez,María C. Vallejo-Pareja,Carlos Jaramillo +35 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a formal re-description of the Jimol and Castilletes formations, including a revised contact, and a description of a new lithostratigraphic unit, the Ware Formation (late Pliocene) were presented.
New radiometric 40Ar-39Ar dates and faunistic analyses refine evolutionary dynamics of Neogene vertebrate assemblages in southern South America.
Francisco Juan Prevosti,Cristo O. Romano,Analía M. Forasiepi,Sidney R. Hemming,Ricardo Adolfo Bonini,Adriana Magdalena Candela,Adriana Magdalena Candela,Esperanza Cerdeño,M. Carolina Madozzo Jaén,M. Carolina Madozzo Jaén,Pablo E. Ortiz,Pablo E. Ortiz,François Pujos,Luciano Luis Rasia,Luciano Luis Rasia,Gabriela Ines Schmidt,Matias Taglioretti,Ross D. E. MacPhee,Ulyses F. J. Pardiñas,Ulyses F. J. Pardiñas +19 more
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Neogene Proto-Caribbean porcupinefishes (Diodontidae).
Orangel Aguilera,Guilherme Oliveira Andrade da Silva,Ricardo Tadeu Lopes,A.S. Machado,Thais Maria Pires dos Santos,Gabriela Marques,Thayse Bertucci,Thayanne Medeiros Aguiar,Jorge D. Carrillo-Briceño,Félix Rodríguez,Carlos Jaramillo +10 more
TL;DR: The paleogeographic distribution of the porcupinefishes group in Tropical America is analyzed, after the complete exhumation of the Panamanian isthmus during the Pliocene.
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