Title of article :
The Late Miocene paleogeography of the Amazon Basin and the evolution of the Amazon River system
Author/Authors :
Latrubesse، نويسنده , , Edgardo M. and Cozzuol، نويسنده , , Mario and da Silva-Caminha، نويسنده , , Silane A.F. and Rigsby، نويسنده , , Catherine A. and Absy، نويسنده , , Maria Lucia and Jaramillo، نويسنده , , Carlos، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
26
From page :
99
To page :
124
Abstract :
On the basis of paleontological content (vertebrates and palynology) and facies analysis from river banks, road cuts, and three wells, we have assigned the uppermost levels of the Solimões Formation in western Amazonia, Brazil, to the Late Miocene. The vertebrate fossil record from outcropping sediments is assigned to the Huayquerian–Mesopotamian mammalian biozones, spanning 9–6.5 Ma. Additionally, we present results that demonstrate that deposits in Peruvian Amazonia attributed to Miocene tidal environments are actually fluvial sediments that have been misinterpreted (both environmentally and chronologically) by several authors. tire Late Miocene sequence was deposited in a continental environment within a subsiding basin. The facies analysis, fossil fauna content, and palynological record indicate that the environment of deposition was dominated by avulsive rivers associated with megafan systems, and avulsive rivers in flood basins (swamps, lakes, internal deltas, and splays). Soils developed on the flatter, drier areas, which were dominated by grasslands and gallery forest in a tropical to subtropical climate. Late Miocene sediments were deposited from westward of the Purus arch up to the border of Brazil with Peru (Divisor Ranges) and Bolivia (Pando block). Eastward of the Iquitos structural high, however, more detailed studies, including vertebrate paleontology, need to be performed to calibrate with more precision the ages of the uppermost levels of the Solimões Formation. olution of the basin during the late Miocene is mainly related to the tectonic behavior of the Central Andes (∼ 3°–15°S). At approximately 5 Ma, a segment of low angle of subduction was well developed in the Nazca Plate, and the deformation in the Subandean foreland produced the inland reactivation of the Divisor/Contamana Ranges and tectonic arrangements in the Eastern Andes. During the Pliocene southwestern Brazilian Amazonia ceased to be an effective sedimentary basin, and became instead an erosional area that contributed sediments to the Amazon fluvial system. At that time, the lowland fluvial systems of southwestern Amazonia (the Purus, Jurua and Javarí basins) become isolated from the Andes by the newly formed north-flowing Ucayali system and south-east flowing Madre de Dios System. It was during the early Pliocene that the Amazon fluvial system integrated regionally and acquired its present appearance, and also when it started to drain water and sediments on a large scale to the Atlantic Ocean.
Keywords :
Amazon Basin , Paleogeography , late Miocene , Paleoecology , Fossil vertebrates , Palinology , Amazon river , Solimoes Formation
Journal title :
EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Record number :
2334393
Link To Document :
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