Artículo de revista
Evidence for an Early-Middle Miocene age of the Navidad Formation (central Chile): Paleontological, paleoclimatic and tectonic implications
Fecha
2013-01Registro en:
Andean Geology 40 (1): 66-78. January, 2013
doi: 10.5027/andgeoV40n1-a03
Autor
Gutiérrez, Néstor M.
Hinojosa Opazo, Luis
Pedroza, Viviana
Le Roux, Jacobus
Institución
Resumen
The age of the Navidad Formation in central Chile has always been controversial, mainly due to the
conflicting age ranges indicated by its macro- and microfossils. Macrofossils are generally interpreted as having been
reworked from older, Early to Middle Miocene strata, whereas a Late Miocene-Pliocene age has been accepted on the
basis of planktonic foraminifer index species. The results of this study, however, indicate that the macrofossils occur in
situ, which necessitates a complete revision of the geochronological data. It is concluded that the evidence for an Early
to Middle Miocene age is overwhelming, and that the planktonic foraminifer index species must have appeared in the
SE Pacific earlier than elsewhere. These include Globoturborotalia apertura, Globorotalia puncticulata (Deshayes),
Globorotalia spheriomizea (Walters), Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (Ehrenberg), and Neogloboquadrina acostaensis
(Blow). An Early to Middle Miocene age for the Navidad Formation correlates well with a reinterpretation of its depositional
environment as a continental shelf instead of a deepwater continental slope, global and regional paleoclimatic
events, and the tectonic development of the Andes Range.