Trincheras Formation
The Trincheras Formation (Spanish : Formación Trincheras , Kitr) is a geological formation of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense , Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes . The formation consisting of a lower unit of calcareous shales and an upper sequence of shales dates to the Early Cretaceous period; Early Aptian epoch and has a maximum thickness of 1,260 metres (4,130 ft). The formation, deposited in a marine platform environment, part of a transgressive cycle, hosts ammonite , bryozoan , mollusc and echinoid fossils.
Etymology
The formation was defined and named in 1969 by Cáceres and Etayo after Quebrada Trincheras, Apulo , Cundinamarca .[ 1]
Description
Lithologies
The Trincheras Formation has a maximum thickness of 1,260 metres (4,130 ft),[ 2] and is characterised by a sequence of claystones with intercalated limestones and sandstones . Fossils of the ammonites Heinzia sp. , Pseudohaploceras sp. , Heminautilus etheringtoni , Cheloniceras sp. and bryozoans , molluscs and echinoids have been found in the Trincheras Formation.[ 3]
Stratigraphy and depositional environment
The Trincheras Formation is the lowermost unit of the Villeta Group ,[ 4] and conformably overlies the Murca , La Naveta and Útica Formations . The formation is overlain in a transitional pattern by the Socotá and El Peñón Formations .[ 2] The Trincheras Formation is subdivided into the El Tigre and Anapoima Members. The age has been estimated to be Early Aptian . Stratigraphically, the formation is time equivalent with the fossiliferous Paja Formation of Boyacá and the Las Juntas Formation .[ 5] The formation has been deposited in a marine well oxygenated platform environment .[ 3] In terms of sequence stratigraphy , this phase was transgressional .[ 5]
Outcrops
Type locality of the Trincheras Formation to the southwest of the Bogotá savanna
The Trincheras Formation is apart from its type locality in Apulo , found near La Mesa and Anapoima ,[ 3] in the Villeta Anticlinal, the Murca-Guayabal -Nimaima Anticlinal and along the roads between Pacho and La Palma and Útica -La Peña.[ 2] The formation also crops out around San Joaquín east of La Mesa ,[ 6] and on the right bank of the Bogotá River near Apulo.[ 7]
The reverse Bituima Fault thrusts the Trincheras Formation on top of the Güagüaquí Group ,[ 6] while the Bogotá River Fault laterally displaces the formation near Anapoima .[ 7]
Regional correlations
See also
Geology of the Eastern Hills
Geology of the Ocetá Páramo
Geology of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense
References
^ Acosta & Ulloa, 2002, p.39
^ a b c Acosta & Ulloa, 2001, p.23
^ a b c Acosta & Ulloa, 2002, p.40
^ Acosta & Ulloa, 2001, p.22
^ a b Villamil, 2012, p.168
^ a b Plancha 227, 1998
^ a b Plancha 246, 1998
Bibliography
Acosta Garay, Jorge E.; Ulloa Melo, Carlos E. (2002), Mapa Geológico del Departamento de Cundinamarca - 1:250,000 - Memoria explicativa , INGEOMINAS , pp. 1–108, retrieved 2017-06-05
Acosta Garay, Jorge; Ulloa Melo, Carlos E. (2001), Geología de la Plancha 208 Villeta - 1:100,000 (PDF) , INGEOMINAS , pp. 1–84, retrieved 2017-06-05
Villamil, Tomas (2012), Chronology Relative Sea Level History and a New Sequence Stratigraphic Model for Basinal Cretaceous Facies of Colombia , Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM), pp. 161–216
Maps
Ulloa, Carlos; Acosta, Jorge (1998), Plancha 208 - Villeta - 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.; Ulloa, Carlos E. (1998), Plancha 246 - Fusagasugá - 1:100,000 , INGEOMINAS , p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-06
External links