Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley

The rise of the Isthmus of Panama is one of the major biogeographical events of the Cenozoic. It is a massive natural experiment in biological migrations, as lands formerly separated—South America and Central/North America—became connected. There is, however, a difference in timing between the fina...

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Main Authors: Carlos Jaramillo, Gheny Krigsfeld Shuster, Carlo D. Rojas, Alexander Henao, Germán Y. Ojeda, Dayenari Caballero, Sebastian Escobar-Florez, Sebastian Gomez, Jaime Escobar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales 2022-06-01
Series:Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales
Subjects:
Online Access:https://raccefyn.co/index.php/raccefyn/article/view/1666
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author Carlos Jaramillo
Gheny Krigsfeld Shuster
Carlo D. Rojas
Alexander Henao
Germán Y. Ojeda
Dayenari Caballero
Sebastian Escobar-Florez
Sebastian Gomez
Jaime Escobar
author_facet Carlos Jaramillo
Gheny Krigsfeld Shuster
Carlo D. Rojas
Alexander Henao
Germán Y. Ojeda
Dayenari Caballero
Sebastian Escobar-Florez
Sebastian Gomez
Jaime Escobar
author_sort Carlos Jaramillo
collection DOAJ
description The rise of the Isthmus of Panama is one of the major biogeographical events of the Cenozoic. It is a massive natural experiment in biological migrations, as lands formerly separated—South America and Central/North America—became connected. There is, however, a difference in timing between the final closure of the Isthmus (4.2-3.5 Ma) and the onset of the massive mammal migrations (i.e., Great American Biotic Interchange, GABI, 2.7 Ma). This time lag has been brought up to suggest that other factors rather than a land connection were major drivers of the GABI. A large biome change from forest to savanna in Central America and Northwestern South America could have provided the conduit for accelerating the biotic interchange between both continents. This hypothesis has been rarely tested as the Plio-Pleistocene fossil record of those regions has not been sufficiently studied. Gheny K. Shuster discovered a brand new Upper Pleistocene fossil deposit in and under the Cauca River (Southwestern Colombia), one of such possible migration corridors. We conducted a field geophysical and sedimentological study to understand the geometry of the fossil-rich deposits, dated them using carbon isotopes (C14), and assessed the type of biome (savanna versus forest) that dominated the region by looking at pollen samples. We found that the conglomerates accumulated in lenticular bodies, perpendicular to the modern course of the Cauca River during the Late Pleistocene in alluvial fan settings. The vegetation corresponds to a tropical dry forest and there is no evidence of extensive savannas. The Cauca River deposits could become a relevant site for the Neotropical Pleistocene.
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spelling doaj.art-04af5a447e1644c19d114e2090e9431e2022-12-22T03:37:24ZengAcademia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y NaturalesRevista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales0370-39082382-49802022-06-014617910.18257/raccefyn.1666Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca ValleyCarlos Jaramillo0Gheny Krigsfeld Shuster1Carlo D. Rojas2Alexander Henao3Germán Y. Ojeda4Dayenari Caballero5Sebastian Escobar-Florez6Sebastian Gomez7Jaime Escobar8Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, PanamaInvestigador independiente, Cali, ColombiaSubsuelo3D S.A.S, Bogotá, ColombiaSubsuelo3D S.A.S, Bogotá, ColombiaSubsuelo3D S.A.S, Bogotá, ColombiaSmithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, PanamaDepartamento de Biología, Universidad ICESI, Cali, ColombiaInstituto de Geociências, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, BrazilUniversidad del Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia The rise of the Isthmus of Panama is one of the major biogeographical events of the Cenozoic. It is a massive natural experiment in biological migrations, as lands formerly separated—South America and Central/North America—became connected. There is, however, a difference in timing between the final closure of the Isthmus (4.2-3.5 Ma) and the onset of the massive mammal migrations (i.e., Great American Biotic Interchange, GABI, 2.7 Ma). This time lag has been brought up to suggest that other factors rather than a land connection were major drivers of the GABI. A large biome change from forest to savanna in Central America and Northwestern South America could have provided the conduit for accelerating the biotic interchange between both continents. This hypothesis has been rarely tested as the Plio-Pleistocene fossil record of those regions has not been sufficiently studied. Gheny K. Shuster discovered a brand new Upper Pleistocene fossil deposit in and under the Cauca River (Southwestern Colombia), one of such possible migration corridors. We conducted a field geophysical and sedimentological study to understand the geometry of the fossil-rich deposits, dated them using carbon isotopes (C14), and assessed the type of biome (savanna versus forest) that dominated the region by looking at pollen samples. We found that the conglomerates accumulated in lenticular bodies, perpendicular to the modern course of the Cauca River during the Late Pleistocene in alluvial fan settings. The vegetation corresponds to a tropical dry forest and there is no evidence of extensive savannas. The Cauca River deposits could become a relevant site for the Neotropical Pleistocene. https://raccefyn.co/index.php/raccefyn/article/view/1666QuaternarySouth AmericaGreat American Biotic InterchangeMegafaunaBiodiversity
spellingShingle Carlos Jaramillo
Gheny Krigsfeld Shuster
Carlo D. Rojas
Alexander Henao
Germán Y. Ojeda
Dayenari Caballero
Sebastian Escobar-Florez
Sebastian Gomez
Jaime Escobar
Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales
Quaternary
South America
Great American Biotic Interchange
Megafauna
Biodiversity
title Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
title_full Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
title_fullStr Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
title_full_unstemmed Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
title_short Upper Pleistocene deposits from the Cauca Valley
title_sort upper pleistocene deposits from the cauca valley
topic Quaternary
South America
Great American Biotic Interchange
Megafauna
Biodiversity
url https://raccefyn.co/index.php/raccefyn/article/view/1666
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