dc.creatorROJAS, Laura E. Garzón
dc.creatorSOARES, Joelson Lima
dc.creatorNOGUEIRA, Anna A. Evangelista
dc.creatorIMBIRIBA JÚNIOR, Manoel
dc.creatorSENA, Clara
dc.creatorGÓES, Ana Maria
dc.creatorBANDEIRA, José
dc.creatorNOGUEIRA, Afonso C. Rodrigues
dc.creatorTRUCKENBRODT, Werner
dc.date2022-01-11T13:23:34Z
dc.date2022-01-11T13:23:34Z
dc.date2021
dc.date.accessioned2023-10-03T22:32:08Z
dc.date.available2023-10-03T22:32:08Z
dc.identifierROJAS, Laura E. Garzón; SOARES, Joelson Lima; NOGUEIRA, Anna A. Evangelista; IMBIRIBA JÚNIOR, Manoel; SENA, Clara; GÓES, Ana Maria; BANDEIRA, José; NOGUEIRA, Afonso C. Rodrigues; TRUCKENBRODT, Werner. Establishing a subsurface hydrostratigraphy using Miocene foraminifera biostratigraphy in the Eastern Amazonian coast, Brazil. In: IAH CONGRESS, 47., Brasil [on line], 2021. Abstracts [...]. Brasil: IAH2021brazil.org, 2021. Code 466.
dc.identifierhttps://rigeo.cprm.gov.br/handle/doc/22586
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/9186448
dc.descriptionForaminifera biostratigraphy has been applied successfully as a geologic tool for establishing the subsurface hydrostratigraphy of the Eastern Amazonia coast. The subsurface Miocene deposits in the Eastern Marajó Graben, previously considered the Pirabas carbonate deposits, were redefined as the Marajó Formation. This unit comprises 250m-thick sedimentary rocks consisting of marine sediments being the main aquifer of this region, and also sandstone and shales deposited in a fluvial and coastal plain environment influenced by the siliciclastic inflow from the Amazon River drainage system. In the late Miocene, changes in the patterns of aquatic and ocean currents occurred, where the Amazonian coast of the northern Brazil show a strong influence of this river. Sixty-four subsurface samples from the easternmost Marajó Graben were provided by the RIMAS-BELÉM project are stored in the CPRM lithoteca along with aliquots of tubular from the of Inhagapi and Vigia locations. These samples were split in the Sample Preparation Laboratory at CPRM, and taken to the UFPA Sedimentology Laboratory, where they are being processed and treated with the usual methods for calcareous microfossils. The macroforaminifera record of the Peneroplidae family, Amphisteginas, and the species-index Orbulina suturalis (Aquitaniano) associated with Globoquadrina quadraria var. advena indicate lower Miocene strata. These microfossils indicate deposition in the coastal marine environment, close to coral reefs. The presence of Quinqueloculina, Elphidium e Globigerina confirms estuaries and inner shelf settings. The occurrence of species Amphistegina lessonii (d'Orbigny) indicates clean water from environments rich in calcareous algae with a tendency to hypersaline waters. The hyaline microforaminifera corroborates these paleoenvironmental changes. The foraminifera assemblage confirms the worldwide Oligocene-Miocene sea-level rise influencing the deposits of the Marajó Formation. The recognition of the well-sorted marine sediments with rounded grains is important as they serve as preferential pathways for groundwater movement. The foraminifer biostratigraphy has been critical in determining the age and the facies changes characterizing the aquifers and confining units in the Eastern Amazon coast.
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languageen
dc.rightsopen
dc.subjectFORAMINIFERA
dc.subjectECOLOGIA
dc.subjectROCHAS SEDIMENTARES
dc.subjectÁGUA SALGADA COM ÁGUA DOCE
dc.subjectROCHAS CARBONATICAS
dc.subjectFORMACAO MARAJO
dc.subjectFORAMINIFERA
dc.subjectECOLOGY
dc.subjectSEDIMENTARY ROCKS
dc.subjectSALT WATER FRESH WATER RELATIONS
dc.subjectCARBONATE ROCKS
dc.subjectMARAJO FORMATION
dc.titleEstablishing a subsurface hydrostratigraphy using Miocene foraminifera biostratigraphy in the Eastern Amazonian coast, Brazil
dc.typeWorking Paper


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