Paleosols and related soil-biota of the early Miocene Santa Cruz Formation (Austral-Magallanes Basin, Argentina): a multidisciplinary approach to reconstructing ancient terrestrial landscapes

Creators:Raigemborn, Maria Sol; Centro De Investigaciones Geológicas, Krapovickas, Verónica; IDEAN – CONICET, Zucol, Alejandro F.; Laboratorio de Paleobotánica, Centro de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia de 14 Tecnología a la Producción (CICYTTP-UADER-Provincia de Entre Ríos-CONICET), Zapata, Luciano; Cátedra de Fundamentos de Geología, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, UNLP, Beilinson, Elisa; CONICET – UNLP. Centro de Investigaciones Geológicas, Toledo, Nestor; División Paleontología Vertebrados, Unidades de Investigación, Anexo Museo, Facultad de 22 Ciencias Naturales y Museo, Perry, Jonathan; Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, The Johns Hopkins University School of 24 Medicine, Baltimore, USA, Lizzoli, Sabrina; Centro de Investigaciones Geologicas, Martegani, Lucía; Cátedra de Mineralogía, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, UNLP, Tineo, David, Passeggi, Esteban; Laboratorio de Paleobotánica, Centro de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia de Tecnología a la Producción (CICYTTP-UADER-Provincia de Entre Ríos-CONICET),
2018-11-02
Descripción

The middle and upper parts of the lower Miocene Santa Cruz Formation (~17–15.9 Ma) in the southeastern Austral-Magallanes Basin (southern Patagonia, Argentina) crop out as a fluvial succession that in parts is pedogenically modified. The study of the paleosols of this unit combined with the study of ichnofossils, microremains, and fossil vertebrates present in these allows us to reconstruct past environmental, ecological, and climatic conditions, as well as paleolandscape evolution of the Santa Cruz Formation during ~1 my. These reconstructions demonstrate three different stages during which very weak to moderate pedogenesis took place. The first one (middle part of the unit) is an epiclastic distal floodplain bearing Calcisols or paleo-calcic Inceptisols, which record a relatively dense vegetation integrating trees, shrubs, palms, and short grasses. Soil fauna is scarce and it is in association with a vertebrate fauna typical of coastal “Santacrucian assemblages”. The second landscape stage (the bottom of the lowermost upper part of the unit) is composed of  epiclastic distal floodplain areas and minor pyroclastic proximal floodplain settings that contain mainly Vertisols. Vertisols record an ecosystem dominated by grasses and palms adapted to variable conditions in hydric availability (C4 plants) and by solitary bee larvae, and adult and nymph soil beetles. Finally, up-section, the third stage attests to the existence of an epiclastic and pyroclastic distal and proximal floodplain over which Protosols developed. Past ecosystems supported grass vegetation (C3 plants), oligochaete annelids and a moderately diverse insect soil fauna (interpreted by their trace fossils) composed of solitary bee larvae, soil beetles and their pupae, cicada nymphs, and myriapods. This combined abiotic (paleosols) and biotic (ichnofossils, microremains, and vertebrates) study indicates that several factors controlled the landscape evolution during the early Miocene of southeastern Patagonia. Highly aggrading fluvial conditions, variations in the position in the floodplain and in sedimentation/pedogenesis ratio, the input of pyroclastic materials, the length of landscape stability, changing hydrologic conditions, and fluctuations of wetter and drier phases in a context of relatively warm and humid climate, seem to be the main factors controlling the landscape. 

Metadatos destacados

Colecciones
Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis

Editor

Asociación Argentina de Sedimentología

Fuente

Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis; Vol 25, No 2 (2018): SPECIAL ISSUE: SEDIMENTARY SYSTEMS FROM THE AUSTRAL-MAGALLANES BASIN, SOUTHERN PATAGONIA., Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis; Vol 25, No 2 (2018): SPECIAL ISSUE: SEDIMENTARY SYSTEMS FROM THE AUSTRAL-MAGALLANES BASIN, SOUTHERN PATAGONIA.

Citación

Raigemborn, Maria Sol; Centro De Investigaciones Geológicas et al., “Paleosols and related soil-biota of the early Miocene Santa Cruz Formation (Austral-Magallanes Basin, Argentina): a multidisciplinary approach to reconstructing ancient terrestrial landscapes,” Archivo PPCT, consulta 1 de abril de 2026, http://archivoppct.caicyt.gov.ar/items/show/7192.

Dublin Core

Autor

Raigemborn, Maria Sol; Centro De Investigaciones Geológicas
Krapovickas, Verónica; IDEAN – CONICET
Zucol, Alejandro F.; Laboratorio de Paleobotánica, Centro de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia de 14 Tecnología a la Producción (CICYTTP-UADER-Provincia de Entre Ríos-CONICET)
Zapata, Luciano; Cátedra de Fundamentos de Geología, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, UNLP
Beilinson, Elisa; CONICET – UNLP. Centro de Investigaciones Geológicas
Toledo, Nestor; División Paleontología Vertebrados, Unidades de Investigación, Anexo Museo, Facultad de 22 Ciencias Naturales y Museo
Perry, Jonathan; Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, The Johns Hopkins University School of 24 Medicine, Baltimore, USA
Lizzoli, Sabrina; Centro de Investigaciones Geologicas
Martegani, Lucía; Cátedra de Mineralogía, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, UNLP
Tineo, David
Passeggi, Esteban; Laboratorio de Paleobotánica, Centro de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia de Tecnología a la Producción (CICYTTP-UADER-Provincia de Entre Ríos-CONICET),

Fuente

Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis; Vol 25, No 2 (2018): SPECIAL ISSUE: SEDIMENTARY SYSTEMS FROM THE AUSTRAL-MAGALLANES BASIN, SOUTHERN PATAGONIA.
Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis; Vol 25, No 2 (2018): SPECIAL ISSUE: SEDIMENTARY SYSTEMS FROM THE AUSTRAL-MAGALLANES BASIN, SOUTHERN PATAGONIA.

Editor

Asociación Argentina de Sedimentología

Fecha

2018-11-02

Colaborador

CONICET, NSF

Derechos

The authors retain the right to every material submitted for publication. In case of being accepted the copyright of the published material will be automatically transferred to the Asociación Argentina de Sedimentología. Also, the authors guarantee the right of the AAS to be the first publisher of the material. Any material published in the Latin American Journal of Sedimentology and Basin Analysis (LAJSBA) is published under Creative Commons license attribution that allows sharing of this material provided the author and publisher are acknowledged.  
Los autores conservan los derechos de autor y garantizan a la revista el derecho de ser la primera publicación del trabajo. La licencia utilizada es Atribución No Comercial 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC 4.0), que permite compartir (copiar y redistribuir el material en cualquier medio y formato) y adaptar (remezclar, transformar y construir sobre el material) bajo los siguientes términos: atribución (reconocer la autoría) y no comercial (no se puede utilizar el material para fines comerciales). La Asociación Argentina de Sedimentología permite al autor(es) retener los derechos de publicación sin restricciones.

Idioma

spa

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion