Middle Miocene closure of the Central American Seaway
Authors:
Montes et al
Abstract:
Uranium-lead geochronology in detrital zircons and provenance analyses in eight boreholes and two surface stratigraphic sections in the northern Andes provide insight into the time of closure of the Central American Seaway. The timing of this closure has been correlated with Plio-Pleistocene global oceanographic, atmospheric, and biotic events. We found that a uniquely Panamanian Eocene detrital zircon fingerprint is pronounced in middle Miocene fluvial and shallow marine strata cropping out in the northern Andes but is absent in underlying lower Miocene and Oligocene strata. We contend that this fingerprint demonstrates a fluvial connection, and therefore the absence of an intervening seaway, between the Panama arc and South America in middle Miocene times; the Central American Seaway had vanished by that time.
Monday, April 20, 2015
Central America Connected to South America Much Earlier During the Middle Miocene Neogene
Labels:
Cenozoic,
central america,
miocene,
neogene,
paleogeography,
paleooceans,
panama,
tethys
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment