Artículos de revistas
Paleogene laterites bearing the highest insect ichnodiversity in paleosols
Fecha
2016-01Registro en:
Bellosi, Eduardo Sergio; Genise, Jorge Fernando; Gonzalez, Mirta Gladys; Verde, Mariano; Paleogene laterites bearing the highest insect ichnodiversity in paleosols; Geological Society of America; Geology; 44; 2; 1-2016; 119-122
0091-7613
1943-2682
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Bellosi, Eduardo Sergio
Genise, Jorge Fernando
Gonzalez, Mirta Gladys
Verde, Mariano
Resumen
Research on laterites deals mostly with geomorphological and geochemical characterization of extant tropical systems, with few examples of sedimentologic and paleosol analyses of mid-latitude detrital records. Extra-tropical, Lower Eocene laterites from Uruguay include Fe-rich indurated horizons (duricrusts) that preserve paleosol features, and nodular beds. Discrete trace fossils are generally absent in laterites, despite that they are formed in tropical ecosystems with high biodiversity. Uruguayan laterites bear abundant, highly diverse, and superbly preserved insect trace fossils. Association, distribution, orientation, and abundance of trace fossils preserved in strongly developed paleosols (Ultisols), are key for reconstructing cyclic depositional and weathering processes governed by hydrology and tectonics. Each cycle lasted ~420 ka and included iterative stages of fluvial sedimentation in a pericratonic scenario, pedogenesis and insect nesting and pupation in a seasonal tropical savanna, duricrust formation by desiccation and interruption of insect activities, and duricrust disaggregation (nodular beds) when rainfall increased. The proposed cycle can be used as a heuristic tool in the study of laterites.