Santa Teresa Formation, Colombia
Santa Teresa Formation | |
---|---|
Stratigraphic range: Late Oligocene (Deseadan) ~ | |
Type | Geological formation |
Underlies | alluvium |
Overlies | San Juan de Río Seco Formation |
Thickness | Type section: 118 m (387 ft) Maximum: 150 m (490 ft) |
Lithology | |
Primary | Claystone |
Other | Siltstone, calcareous sandstone |
Location | |
Coordinates | 4°50′55″N 74°37′14″W / 4.84861°N 74.62056°W |
Country | Colombia |
Extent | Western Eastern Ranges, Andes Southern Middle Magdalena Valley |
Type section | |
Named for | Vereda Santa Teresa |
Named by | De Porta |
Location | San Juan de Rioseco |
Year defined | 1966 |
Coordinates | 4°50′55″N 74°37′14″W / 4.84861°N 74.62056°W |
Region | Cundinamarca |
Country | Colombia |
Thickness at type section | 118 m (387 ft) |
Paleogeography of Northern South America 35 Ma, by Ron Blakey |
The Santa Teresa Formation (Spanish: Formación Santa Teresa, Tist, Pgst) is a geological formation of the western Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes, west of the Bituima Fault, and the southern Middle Magdalena Valley. The formation spreads across the western part of Cundinamarca and the northern portion of Tolima. The formation consists of grey claystones intercalated by orange quartz siltstones and sandstones of small to conglomeratic grain size. The thickness at its type section has been measured to be 118 metres (387 ft) and a maximum thickness of 150 metres (490 ft) suggested.
In the formation, dated on the basis of its fossil content to the Late Oligocene, many leaf imprints and mollusks were found, suggesting a lacustrine to deltaic depositional environment with periodical marine incursions.
Etymology
[edit]The formation was defined by De Porta in 1966 and named after the vereda Santa Teresa, San Juan de Rioseco.[1]
Description
[edit]The Santa Teresa Formation is the youngest unit outcropping in the Jerusalén-Guaduas synclinal, western Eastern Ranges, covering the San Juan de Río Seco Formation. The formation was formerly called La Cira Formation. In the Balú quebrada, the formation shows a thickness of 118 metres (387 ft), while the maximum thickness could reach 150 metres (490 ft).[1]
The lower boundary of the formation is marked by the first occurrence of grey claystones, covering the light brown claystones of the San Juan de Río Seco Formation. The formation comprises grey claystones intercalated by orange quartz siltstones and sandstones of small to conglomeratic grain size. The roundness of the sandstone grains has been characterized as angular to subangular by Lamus Ochoa et al. in 2013.[2] The claystones occur in thick layers with wavy lamination.[1]
In these thick packages of claystones, the formation has provided fossil leaves in various forms and sizes, and to a lesser extent the remains of mollusks; gastropods and bivalves. The basal contacts of these beds are straight to transitional and most of the time are coarsening upward towards quartz arenites where the gastropods dominate. These facies sequences have a thickness of about 2 metres (6.6 ft). Locally, bioturbation, siderite nodules and coal beds occur in the formation. The sandstones occur in very thin to very thick beds, characterized by plain parallel lamination, in lenses and very locally in flasers. The cement of the arenites is calcareous.[1] The grain composition of the lithic fraction comprises zircon,[3] epidote, zoisite, clinozoisite and pyroxenes, which at the top of the formation amounts to 86 percent.[4]
Stratigraphy and depositional environment
[edit]The Santa Teresa Formation conformably overlies the San Juan de Río Seco Formation and is covered by subrecent alluvium.[1] The formation is part of the sequence after the Eocene unconformity.[5]
The age has been inferred to be Late Oligocene. The depositional environment has been interpreted as lacustrine with marine influence in the form of channels. The abundance of brackish and fresh water gastropods suggests these environmental conditions prevailed in the Oligocene of central Colombia.[1]
In the type section at the Balú quebrada, facies traits that confirm this interpretation can be observed. The lacustrine areas were probably shallow water environments with reducing conditions and a continuous supply of siliciclastics by small deltas. The many leaf imprints and coal layers support the presence of a lush vegetation at the time of deposition.[1] The abundance of lithic clasts near the top of the formation supports a renewed provenance area to the east; the uplift of the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes,[6] due to activity of the La Salina Fault.[7]
Paleontology
[edit]The Santa Teresa Formation has provided fossil mollusks, described by De Porta and Solé De Porta in 1962 and De Porta Anodontites laciranus, Diplodon oponcintonis, Diplodon waringi,[8] and Corbula sp., among other mollusks described by De Porta in 1966.[1]
Regional correlations
[edit]- Legend
- group
- important formation
- fossiliferous formation
- minor formation
- (age in Ma)
- proximal Llanos (Medina)[note 1]
- distal Llanos (Saltarin 1A well)[note 2]
See also
[edit]Notes and references
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Acosta & Ulloa, 2001, p.64
- ^ Lamus Ochoa et al., 2013, p.29
- ^ Lamus Ochoa et al., 2013, p.34
- ^ Lamus Ochoa et al., 2013, p.32
- ^ Lamus Ochoa et al., 2013, p.22
- ^ Lamus Ochoa et al., 2013, p.35
- ^ Caballero et al., 2010, p.74
- ^ Acosta Garay et al., 2002, p.49
- ^ a b c d e f García González et al., 2009, p.27
- ^ a b c d e f García González et al., 2009, p.50
- ^ a b García González et al., 2009, p.85
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Barrero et al., 2007, p.60
- ^ a b c d e f g h Barrero et al., 2007, p.58
- ^ Plancha 111, 2001, p.29
- ^ a b Plancha 177, 2015, p.39
- ^ a b Plancha 111, 2001, p.26
- ^ Plancha 111, 2001, p.24
- ^ Plancha 111, 2001, p.23
- ^ a b Pulido & Gómez, 2001, p.32
- ^ Pulido & Gómez, 2001, p.30
- ^ a b Pulido & Gómez, 2001, pp.21-26
- ^ Pulido & Gómez, 2001, p.28
- ^ Correa Martínez et al., 2019, p.49
- ^ Plancha 303, 2002, p.27
- ^ Terraza et al., 2008, p.22
- ^ Plancha 229, 2015, pp.46-55
- ^ Plancha 303, 2002, p.26
- ^ Moreno Sánchez et al., 2009, p.53
- ^ Mantilla Figueroa et al., 2015, p.43
- ^ Manosalva Sánchez et al., 2017, p.84
- ^ a b Plancha 303, 2002, p.24
- ^ a b Mantilla Figueroa et al., 2015, p.42
- ^ Arango Mejía et al., 2012, p.25
- ^ Plancha 350, 2011, p.49
- ^ Pulido & Gómez, 2001, pp.17-21
- ^ Plancha 111, 2001, p.13
- ^ Plancha 303, 2002, p.23
- ^ Plancha 348, 2015, p.38
- ^ Planchas 367-414, 2003, p.35
- ^ Toro Toro et al., 2014, p.22
- ^ Plancha 303, 2002, p.21
- ^ a b c d Bonilla et al., 2016, p.19
- ^ Gómez Tapias et al., 2015, p.209
- ^ a b Bonilla et al., 2016, p.22
- ^ a b Duarte et al., 2019
- ^ García González et al., 2009
- ^ Pulido & Gómez, 2001
- ^ García González et al., 2009, p.60
Bibliography
[edit]See also sources for the correlation table
- Acosta Garay, Jorge; Ulloa Melo, Carlos E. (2001), Geología de la Plancha 227 La Mesa - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, pp. 1–80
- Acosta Garay, Jorge Enrique; Guatame, Rafael; Caicedo A., Juan Carlos; Cárdenas, Jorge Ignacio (2002), Geología de la Plancha 245 Girardot - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, pp. 1–101
- Caballero, Víctor; Parra, Mauricio; Mora Bohórquez, Andrés Roberto (2010), Levantamiento de la Cordillera Oriental de Colombia durante el Eoceno tardío – Oligoceno temprano: Proveniencia sedimentaria en el Sinclinal de Nuevo Mundo, Cuenca Valle Medio del Magdalena, vol. 32, Boletín de Geología, pp. 45–77
- Lamus Ochoa, Felipe; Bayona, Germán; Cardona, Agustín; Mora, Andrés (2013), Procedencia de las unidades cenozoicas del Sinclinal de Guaduas: implicación en la evolución tectónica del sur del Valle Medio del Magdalena y orógenos adyacentes, vol. 35, Boletín de Geología, pp. 1–42
Maps
[edit]- Barrero, Darío; Vesga, Carlos J. (2010), Plancha 207 - Honda - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-06
- Barrero, Darío; Vesga, Carlos J. (2010), Plancha 226 - Líbano - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-06
- Ulloa, Carlos E.; Rodríguez, Erasmo; Acosta, Jorge E. (1998), Plancha 227 - La Mesa - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-06
- Acosta, Jorge E.; Guatame, Rafael; Torres, Oscar; Solano, Frank (1999), Plancha 245 - Girardot - 1:100,000, INGEOMINAS, p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-06
- Geologic formations of Colombia
- Paleogene Colombia
- Oligocene Series of South America
- Deseadan
- Chattian Stage
- Shale formations
- Sandstone formations
- Siltstone formations
- Coal formations
- Deltaic deposits
- Lacustrine deposits
- Fossiliferous stratigraphic units of South America
- Geography of Cundinamarca Department
- Geography of Tolima Department