EGU24-4374, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-4374
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Integrated biostratigraphy and paleoenvironmental setting of the initial deposits of the Pisco Formation (Peru): Middle Miocene to early Late Miocene

Elisa Malinverno1, Giulia Bosio1, Giovanni Bianucci2, Alberto Collareta2, Mario Urbina3, and Claudio Di Celma4
Elisa Malinverno et al.
  • 1University of Milano-Bicocca, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Milano, Italy
  • 2University of Pisa, Department of Earth Sciences, Pisa, Italy
  • 3Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Departamento de Paleontología de Vertebrados, Lima, Peru
  • 4University of Camerino, School of Sciences and Technologies, Camerino, Italy

The East Pisco Basin is a world known Fossil-Lagerstätte that provided an abundant and exceptionally well-preserved record of marine vertebrate fauna (Bosio et al., 2021) within a middle Eocene to late Miocene sediment succession. In particular, the Miocene Pisco Formation is the most studied: its stratigraphic architecture has been recently redefined in the Ica River Valley (Di Celma et al., 2017, 2022) with the identification of three depositional sequences, namely P0, P1, P2 in ascending order, separated by extended unconformities which testify subaerial exposure and correlate with major climatic cycles (Di Celma et al., 2018). While P2 (8.4-6.7 Ma) and P1 (9.5-8.6 Ma) provided abundant diatom markers and common volcanic ash layers that were dated through the 40Ar/39Ar method (Bosio et al., 2020a), P0 (14.7-12.6 Ma), lacking microfossils and ash layers, was chronologically constrained by Strontium Isotope Stratigraphy (Bosio et al., 2020b).

A new section sampled at Cerro Tiza in the Ica River Valley provided a fossiliferous P0 and the basal P1,  allowing to constrain the age and paleoenvironment of these early deposits of the Pisco Formation. The age of P0 is now constrained by the occurrence of Denticulopsis hyalina (14.9-13.1 Ma), D. simonsenii (14.5-8.7 Ma), D. vulgaris (~13.5-8.5 Ma), Koizumia adaroi (14.2-9.0 Ma) and Crucidenticula nicobarica (15.1-12.3 Ma) - similar to the assemblage observed further south in the Laberinto area (DeVries et al., 2021) and well in agreement with isotopic dating - in a high productivity (abundant Thalassionema) coastal setting (common phytoliths, Paralia, Melosira, Actinoptychus and Grammatophora). The early deposits of P1 are constrained by the occurrence of Lithodesmium reynoldsii (10.0-9.0 Ma), D. vulgaris (~12.0-8.6 Ma) and D. praekatayamae (9.6-8.6 Ma) still in a high productivity (common Thalassionema, Chaetoceros) coastal setting (common Delphineis, Actinoptychus, Grammatophora). Few to abundant calcareous nannofossils (Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilicus, R. perplexa, Discoaster variabilis, Coccolithus pelagicus) are also here reported for the first time, testifying to a more open coastal environment, as compared to the previously-analyzed settings located more on-shore.

References

Bosio et al., 2020a. Tephrochronology and chronostratigraphy of the Miocene Chilcatay and Pisco formations (East Pisco Basin, Peru). NOS, 53 (2), 213-247.

Bosio et al., 2020b. Strontium Isotope Stratigraphy and the thermophilic fossil fauna from the middle Miocene of the East Pisco Basin (Peru). JSAES, 97, 102399.

Bosio et al, 2021. Taphonomy of marine vertebrates of the Pisco Formation (Miocene, Peru): Insights into the origin of an outstanding Fossil-Lagerstätte. PLoS ONE, 16, e0254395.

Di Celma et al., 2017. Sequence stratigraphy and paleontology of the upper Miocene Pisco Formation along the western side of the lower Ica Valley (Ica desert, Peru). RIPS, 123 (2): 255-273.

Di Celma et al., 2018. Intraformational unconformities as a record of late Miocene eustatic falls of sea level in the Pisco Formation (southern Peru). JOM, 14 (2), 607-619.

Di Celma et al.,  2022. Towards deciphering the Cenozoic evolution of the East Pisco Basin (southern Peru), JOM, 18 (2), 397-412.

DeVries et al., 2021. The Miocene stratigraphy of the Laberinto area (Río Ica Valley) and its bearing on the geological history of the East Pisco Basin (south-central Peru). JSAES, 111, 103458

How to cite: Malinverno, E., Bosio, G., Bianucci, G., Collareta, A., Urbina, M., and Di Celma, C.: Integrated biostratigraphy and paleoenvironmental setting of the initial deposits of the Pisco Formation (Peru): Middle Miocene to early Late Miocene, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-4374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-4374, 2024.