Geologic and Tectonic Development of the Caribbean Plate Boundary in Southern Central America
Stratigraphic development of southwestern Panama as determined from integration of marine seismic data and onshore geology
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Published:January 01, 1995
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Radim A. Kolarsky, Paul Mann, Simonetta Monechi, Radim A. Kolarsky, Paul Mann, Donna Meyerhoff-Hull, Emile A. Pessagno, Jr., Simonetta Monechi, 1995. "Stratigraphic development of southwestern Panama as determined from integration of marine seismic data and onshore geology", Geologic and Tectonic Development of the Caribbean Plate Boundary in Southern Central America, Paul Mann
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We correlate seismic map units identified on industry seismic lines in the Gulf of Chiriquí, southwestern Panama, with onland igneous rocks and sedimentary formations described in this chapter. We propose six principal stages in the stratigraphic development of southwestern Panama based on our results and the results of previous workers in Costa Rica, westernmost Panama, and the western Colombian basin. The first stage in southwestern Panama is represented by basaltic basement rocks of Jurassic?-Late Cretaceous age interbedded with Upper Cretaceous pelagic sedimentary rocks. Following previous workers and data presented here, we suggest that these rocks formed in an intraoceanic, oceanic plateau setting. A second stage is represented by a major stratigraphic hiatus inferred to represent an erosional event that affected the basaltic basement of Panama in Paleocene time. A third stage is represented by a widespread basal transgressive section of coarse clastic rocks and reefal carbonate rocks of early to middle Eocene age. This section records initiation of clastic sedimentation over much of southern Central America. A fourth stage is represented by a thick section of mainly marine turbidites that appears to represent continued erosion of the land areas in southern Central America and upward deepening of adjacent marine environments. A fifth stage is represented by a stratigraphic hiatus in middle Miocene to late Miocene time that may represent the “breakup” unconformity associated with initiation of strike-slip faulting and rifting in the Gulf of Chiriquí. A sixth stage is represented by early Pliocene to Pleistocene rifting and syn-rift sedimentation in the Gulf of Chiriquí. Thick sedimentary fill of rift basins may reflect accelerated uplift of southern Central America and increased activity of the Middle America arc. The regional extent of the stratigraphic record of several of these stages across large areas of southern Central America and the western Colombian basin supports the previously proposed hypothesis that the crust of southern Central America represents the western upturned edge of a Late Cretaceous Caribbean oceanic plateau known from deep-sea drilling and seismic stratigraphic studies in the Colombian and Venezuelan basins of the Caribbean Sea.
- algae
- assemblages
- Atlantic Ocean
- basalts
- basement
- biostratigraphy
- biozones
- carbonate rocks
- Caribbean Sea
- Cenozoic
- Central America
- clastic rocks
- Colombian Basin
- correlation
- Cretaceous
- eustasy
- faults
- Foraminifera
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- igneous rocks
- Invertebrata
- Jurassic
- lithofacies
- marine environment
- marine methods
- Mesozoic
- microfossils
- Miocene
- nannofossils
- Neogene
- North Atlantic
- offshore
- Oligocene
- onshore
- Paleocene
- Paleogene
- palynomorphs
- Panama
- pelagic environment
- planktonic taxa
- Plantae
- Protista
- Radiolaria
- reefs
- rift zones
- sea-level changes
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- seismic stratigraphy
- SEM data
- sequence stratigraphy
- stratigraphy
- strike-slip faults
- surveys
- Tertiary
- thallophytes
- transgression
- turbidite
- type localities
- unconformities
- uplifts
- Venezuelan Basin
- volcanic rocks
- Santiago Formation
- Burica Peninsula
- Gulf of Chiriqui
- Coiba Island
- Punta Blanca
- southwestern Panama
- Punta Malena
- Maracas Basin
- Punta Damas
- Ocu Formation
- Punta Bucaro
- Tonosi Formation
- Azuero-Sona fault zone