Pisco Basin | |
---|---|
Cuenca de Pisco | |
Coordinates | 14°15′S 76°0′W / 14.250°S 76.000°W |
Etymology | City of Pisco, Peru |
Location | Western South America |
Country | Peru |
State(s) | Ica Region |
Cities | Pisco |
Characteristics | |
On/Offshore | Both |
Part of | Circum-Pacific forearc basins |
Area | 300 km (190 mi) |
Hydrology | |
Sea(s) | Eastern Pacific Ocean |
River(s) | Pisco River |
Geology | |
Basin type | Forearc basin |
Orogeny | Andean |
Age | Eocene–Pliocene |
Stratigraphy | Stratigraphy |
Pisco Basin (Spanish: Cuenca de Pisco) is a sedimentary basin extending over 300 kilometres (190 mi) in southwestern Peru.[1] The basin has a 2 kilometres (6,600 ft) thick sedimentary fill, which is about half the thickness of more northern foreland basins in Peru.[2]
The oldest known sediments are the Eocene sandstones of the Caballas Formation, while the youngest deposits, the fossiliferous Pisco Formation, date to the Early Pleistocene.[2][note 1] In relation to present-day, topography the fill of Pisco Basin makes the upper part of the Coastal Cordillera of southern Peru, the coastal plains, the Ica-Nazca Depression and the Andean foothills.[3]
The basin is renowned for hosting various highly fossiliferous stratigraphic units; the Pisco Formation has provided a wealth of marine mammals (including sloths), birds, fish and other groups, as have the Chilcatay, Otuma and Paracas Formations.
Stratigraphy
Age[2][5] | SALMA[note 3] | Units[2][5] | Environment[2][5] | Lithology[2][5][6] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pleistocene | Uquian | Pisco | Lagoonal to near-shore | Bioclastic conglomerate, sandstone | |
Middle Miocene | Colloncuran | ||||
Early Miocene | Colhuehuapian | Chilcatay | Marine | Siltstone, sandstone | |
Late Oligocene | Deseadan | ||||
Early Oligocene Late Eocene | Tinguirirican Divisaderan | Otuma | Marine embayment | Bioclastic sandstone, sandstone, silty sandstone, mudstone, dolomitic sediment | |
Late Eocene | Divisaderan | Paracas | Yumaque | Mudrock, phosphatic shale, diatomite, porcellanite, chert | |
Late Eocene | Mustersan | Los Choros | Inner shelf, shoreface, intertidal | Bioclastic conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone, mudrock | |
Eocene | Casamayoran | Caballas | Fluvial | Sandstone, tuff, coal | |
Tectonic and sedimentary evolution
The basin developed in a setting of extensional tectonics from Eocene to the Late Miocene with short-lived episode of basin inversion in the Middle Miocene.[7] Late Pliocene and Pleistocene uplift of the basin may be consequence of the subduction of Nazca Ridge.[2][8]
Sedimentary strata of the basin shows evidence for a series of marine transgressions during the last 50 million years.[9] These marine transgressions occurred in a sequence 41-34 Ma, 31-28 Ma, 25-16 Ma, 15-11 Ma, 10-5 Ma, and 4-2 Ma.[9] The end of most of the marine transgressions is thought to be associated either with global sea level falls or compressional events in the Andes.[9]
Oligo-Miocene transgression
The marine Oligo-Miocene (25–16 Ma[9]) marine transgression is evidenced by a series of sedimentary strata containing fossils of marine diatoms, Peruchilus snails and Pitar and Cucullaea clams.[10] Oligo-Miocene marine environments in the Pisco Basin range from littoral to shelf.[10] Moquegua Basin southeast of Pisco Basin appear to have been unaffected by the transgression.[10]
Within the Andean margin contemporary marine transgressions are also known from southern Chile, Patagonia and Colombia.[10] As such the marine transgression is thought to represent a regional phenomenon with the steadily rising central Andes being an exception.[10]
Paleontology
Pisco Formation
Chilcatay Formation
Group | Fossils | Notes |
---|---|---|
Mammals | Chilcacetus cavirhinus, Huaridelphis raimondii, Incacetus broggii, Inticetus vertizi, Macrosqualodelphis ukupachai, Notocetus vanbenedeni, cf. Kentriodon sp., Cetotheriidae indet., Eurhinodelphinidae indet., Mysticeti indet., Odontoceti indet., Pinnipedia indet., Physeteroidea indet., Squalodelphinidae indet. | |
Birds | Palaeospheniscus sp. | |
Reptiles | Testudines indet. | |
Fish | Carcharhinus cf. brachurus, Carcharodon hastalis, Carcharodon subauriculatus, Hemipristis cf. serra, Isurus desori | |
Otuma Formation
Group | Fossils | Notes |
---|---|---|
Mammals | Cynthiacetus peruvianus, Basilosauridae indet. | |
Birds | Icadyptes salasi, Inkayacu paracasensis, Spheniscidae indet. | |
Fish | Engraulis sp., Sardinops sp. | |
Paracas Formation
Group | Fossils | Notes |
---|---|---|
Mammals | Ocucajea picklingi, Supayacetus muizoni, Basilosauridae indet., Mystacodon selenensis, Peregocetus pacificus, Perucetus colossus | |
Birds | Perudyptes devriesi | |
Fish | Pristis sp., Myliobatis sp., Clupeiformes sp. | |
See also
- Arauco Basin, Chile
- Altiplano Basin, Peru, Chile, Bolivia
- Caldera Basin, Chile
- Cocinetas Basin, Colombia
- Urumaco Formation, Venezuela
Notes and references
Notes
- ↑ later publications give a younger top date
- ↑ Based on "DeVries (1998) as presented by León et al. (2007)"[4]
- ↑ See SALMA Bibliography for sources
References
- ↑ Solís Mundaca, 2018, p.1
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Dunbar et al., 1990
- ↑ León et al. 2007, p. 7.
- ↑ León et al. 2007, p. 44.
- 1 2 3 4 DeVries et al., 2017
- ↑ León et al. 2007, p. 45.
- ↑ León et al. 2007, p. 146.
- ↑ León et al. 2007, p. 145.
- 1 2 3 4 DeVries, 1998
- 1 2 3 4 5 Macharé et al., 1988
- 1 2 Ullujaya at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Ullujaya 2 at Fossilworks.org
- 1 2 Santa Rosa at Fossilworks.org
- 1 2 Zamaca at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Cerro Buque M2 at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Cerro Buque M8 at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Paracas Bay at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Archaeocete Valley, Otuma, AV-10 at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Ullujaya Valley at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Bajada del Diablo at Fossilworks.org
- 1 2 Paracas Reserve at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Archaeocete Valley at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Archaeocete Valley, Paracas, AV-17 at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Archaeocete Valley, Paracas, AV-19 at Fossilworks.org
- 1 2 Lambert et al., 2017
- ↑ Lambert, Olivier; Bianucci, Giovanni; Salas-Gismondi, Rodolfo; Di Celma, Claudio; Steurbaut, Etienne; Urbina, Mario; de Muizon, Christian (2019). "An Amphibious Whale from the Middle Eocene of Peru Reveals Early South Pacific Dispersal of Quadrupedal Cetaceans". Current Biology. 29 (8): 1352–1359.e3. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2019.02.050. hdl:11581/425570. ISSN 0960-9822.
- ↑ Bianucci, Giovanni; Lambert, Olivier; Urbina, Mario; Merella, Marco; Collareta, Alberto; Bennion, Rebecca; Salas-Gismondi, Rodolfo; Benites-Palomino, Aldo; Post, Klaas; de Muizon, Christian; Bosio, Giulia; Di Celma, Claudio; Malinverno, Elisa; Pierantoni, Pietro Paolo; Villa, Igor Maria (2023-08-02). "A heavyweight early whale pushes the boundaries of vertebrate morphology". Nature: 1–6. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06381-1. ISSN 1476-4687.
- ↑ Quebrada Perdida at Fossilworks.org
- ↑ Collareta, Alberto; Tejada-Medina, Luz; Chacaltana-Budiel, César; Landini, Walter; Altamirano-Sierra, Alí; Urbina-Schmitt, Mario; Bianucci, Giovanni (2020-03-17). "A rhinopristiform sawfish (genus Pristis) from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of southern Peru and its regional implications". Carnets Geol. 20 (05): 91. doi:10.4267/2042/70759. hdl:20.500.12544/2621. ISSN 1634-0744.
Bibliography
- Stratigraphy
- DeVries, Thomas J.; Mario Urbina, and Nathan A. Jud. 2017. The Eocene-Oligocene Otuma Depositional Sequence (East Pisco Basin, Peru): Paleogeographic and Paleoceanographic Implications of New Data. Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica del Perú 112. 014–038. Accessed 2020-03-09.
- Dunbar, Robert B.; Richard C. Marty, and Paul A. Baker. 1990. Cenozoic marine sedimentation in the Sechura and Pisco basins, Peru. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 77(3–4). 235–261. Accessed 2020-03-09.
Geology publications
- León, Walter; Antenor Aleman; Walter Rosell; Víctor Torres, and Orlando de la Cruz. 2007. Estratigrafía, sedimentología y evolucón tectónica de la cuenca Pisco Oriental, 1. 27; Estudios Regionales, Serie D. Accessed 2020-03-09.
- Devries, T.J.. 1998. Oligocene deposition and Cenozoic sequence boundaries in the Pisco Basin (Peru). Journal of South American Earth Sciences 11(3). 217–231. Accessed 2020-03-09.
- Macharé, José; Thomas Devries; John Barron, and Élisabeth Fourtanier. 1988. Oligo-Miocene transgression along the Pacifie margin of South America: new paleontological and geological evidence from the Pisco basin (Peru). Geódynamique 3(1–2). 25–37. Accessed 2020-03-09.
Paleontology publications
- Solís Mundaca, Flavio Alejandro. 2018. Bioestratigrafía e implicancias paleoceanográficas de las diatomeas de la sección Cerro Caucato, Formación Pisco, Ica, Peru (MSc. thesis), 1–158. Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia. Accessed 2018-09-10.
- Lambert, O.; M. Martínez Cáceres; G. Bianucci; C. Di Celma; R. Salas Gismondi; E. Steurbaut; Mario Urbina, and C. de Muizon. 2017. Earliest Mysticete from the Late Eocene of Peru Sheds New Light on the Origin of Baleen Whales. Current Biology 27. 1–7. Accessed 2019-02-04.
Further reading
- Chilcatay Formation
- Bianucci, Giovanni; Giulia Bosio; Elisa Malinverno; Christian De Muizon; Igor M. Villa; Mario Urbina, and Olivier Lambert. 2018. A new large squalodelphinid (Cetacea, Odontoceti) from Peru sheds light on the Early Miocene platanistoid disparity and ecology. Royal Society Open Science 5(4). 172302. Accessed 2019-02-11.
- De la Cruz, Aldo Alván. 2008. Geología de Ocucaje: aportes en la sedimentología y paleontología de Lomas de Ullujaya (Ica, Perú). Revista del Instituto de Investigaciones FIGMMG 11. 51–59. Accessed 2017-08-15.
- Lambert, Olivier; Christian De Muizon; Elisa Malinverno; Claudio Di Celma; Mario Urbina, and Giovanni Bianucci. 2017. A new odontocete (toothed cetacean) from the Early Miocene of Peru expands the morphological disparity of extinct heterodont dolphins. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 16(12). 981–1016. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Lambert, Olivier; Giovanni Bianucci, and Mario Urbina. 2014. Huaridelphis raimondii, a new early Miocene Squalodelphinidae (Cetacea, Odontoceti) from the Chilcatay Formation, Peru. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 34(5). 987–1004. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Paracas Group
- Clarke, Julia A.; Daniel T. Ksepka; Marcelo Stucchi; Mario Urbina; Norberto Giannini; Sara Bertelli; Yanina Narváez, and Clint A. Boyd. 2007. Paleogene equatorial penguins challenge the proposed relationship between penguin biogeography, body size evolution, and Cenozoic climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104. 11545–11550. Accessed 2017-08-15.
- Pisco Formation
- Altamirano Sierra, Alí J. 2013. Primer registro de pelicano (Aves: Pelecanidae) para el Mioceno tardio de la formacion Pisco, Peru. Bulletin de l'Institut français d'études andines 42. 1–12. Accessed 2017-09-04.
- Báez Gómez, Diego A. 2006. Estudio paleoambiental de la formación Pisco:: Localidad Ocucaje. Revista del Instituto de Investigaciones FIGMMG 9. 64–69. Accessed 2017-09-04.
- Bianucci, Giovanni; Claudio Di Celma; Mario Urbina, and Olivier Lambert. 2016. New beaked whales from the late Miocene of Peru and evidence for convergent evolution in stem and crown Ziphiidae (Cetacea, Odontoceti). PeerJ 4. e2479. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Brand, Leonard; Mario Urbina; Arthur Chadwick; Thomas J. DeVries, and Raul Esperante. 2011. A high resolution stratigraphic framework for the remarkable fossil cetacean assemblage of the Miocene/Pliocene Pisco Formation, Peru. Journal of South American Earth Sciences 31(4). 414–425. Accessed 2017-10-01.
- Collareta, Alberto; Olivier Lambert; Christian De Muizon; Mario Urbina, and Giovanni Bianucci. 2017. Koristocetus pescei gen. et sp. nov., a diminutive sperm whale (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Kogiidae) from the late Miocene of Peru. Fossil Record 20(2). 259–278. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Lambert, Olivier; Giovanni Bianucci; Mario Urbina, and Jonathan H. Geisler. 2017. A new inioid (Cetacea, Odontoceti, Delphinida) from the Miocene of Peru and the origin of modern dolphin and porpoise families. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 179(4). 919–946. .
- Marx, Felix G.; Olivier Lambert, and Christian De Muizon. 2017. A new Miocene baleen whale from Peru deciphers the dawn of cetotheriids. Royal Society Open Science 4(9). 170560. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Marx, Felix G., and Naoki Kohno. 2016. A new Miocene baleen whale from the Peruvian desert. Royal Society Open Science 3(10). 160542. Accessed 2019-02-12.
- Poma Porras, Orlando; Edgard Horna Santillán, and Raúl Esperante. 2009. Baleen Fósil (Cetacea: mysticeti) en Sedimentos de la Cuenca Marina del Neógeno en la Formación Pisco, al Sur del Perú. Revista de Investigación Universitaria 1. 84–97. Accessed 2017-09-04.
- Ramassamy, Benjamin; Olivier Lambert; Alberto Collareta; Mario Urbina, and Giovanni Bianucci. 2018. Description of the skeleton of the fossil beaked whale Messapicetus gregarius: searching potential proxies for deep-diving abilities. Fossil Record 21(1). 11–32. Accessed 2019-02-11.
- Solís Mundaca, Flavio Alejandro. 2018. Bioestratigrafía e implicancias paleoceanográficas de las diatomeas de la sección Cerro Caucato, Formación Pisco, Ica, Peru (MSc. thesis), 1–158. Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia. Accessed 2018-09-10.
- Stucchi, Marcelo; Steven D. Emslie; Rafael M. Varas Malca, and Mario Urbina Schmitt. 2015a. A new late Miocene condor (Aves, Cathartidae) from Peru and the origin of South American condors. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 35(5). e972507. Accessed 2019-02-13.
- Stucchi, Marcelo; Rafael M. Varas Malca, and Mario Urbina Schmitt. 2015b. New Miocene sulid birds from Peru and considerations on their Neogene fossil record in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61(2). 417–427. Accessed 2019-02-13.
- Stucchi, M. 2007. Los pingüinos de la Formación Pisco (Neógeno), Perú. 4th European Meeting on the Palaeontology and Stratigraphy of Latin America, Cuadernos del Museo Geominero 8. 367–373. Accessed 2017-09-04.