Cenozoic giant pectinids from California and the Tertiary Caribbean Province: Lyropecten, "Macrochlamis," Vertipecten, and Nodipecten species
Links
- Document: Report (pdf)
- Download citation as: RIS | Dublin Core
Abstract
Tertiary pectinids recognized for more than 125 years by field geologists can now be used to date and correlate 3-4 m.y. increments of the geologic record and to determine faunal distributions in relation to tectonic terranes. Fossil pectinids are commonly preserved in shallowmarine clastic deposits that mostly lack microfossils. The stratigraphic ranges of Lyropecten, "Macrochlamis," Vertipecten, and Nodipecten can be used to subdivide provincial megafaunal stages in California and to correlate chronostratigraphic units in the Pacific Northwest and Atlantic Coastal Plain. One New World taxon, "Macrochlamis" magnolia ojaiensis, n. subsp., supports a direct correlation between the middle "Vaqueros" Stage of California (interpolated as 27-23 m.y. B.P.) and an Upper Chattian-Lower Aquitanian Stage section in southwestern Switzerland. Two lithologic units widespread in California, the Vaqueros Formation (spanning 12 m.y., from the late Oligocene into the early Miocene) and Temblor Formation (deposited over a period of 26 m.y., from the late Eocene or early Oligocene to the middle Miocene), transgress much longer periods of time than have been generally recognized.
Certain species pairs are identified as cognates, close relatives descended from a common ancestor. Close similarities are found between widely separated assemblages from the Salton Trough of California and the Caribbean, the Gulf Coastal Plain of eastern Mexico and the Sinu Valley of western Colombia, the Santa Rosalia area in Baja California Sur, Mexico, and the Paraguana Peninsula of Venezuela. Distribution patterns for relatively recently dispersed taxa have important implications for middle to late Cenozoic paleogeography and tectonic history, especially in west Mexico and the Caribbean. Speciation was concurrent with the closure of the Isthmus of Panama, the opening of the Gulf of California, and possibly with the northward translation of segments of the California Continental Borderland. Tertiary Caribbean and PacificPanamic Lyropectens and Nodipectens are plotted on a simplified tectonic map as an early step in considering Cenozoic molluscan distributions in relation to major plate boundaries. Taxa having unusual distributions are tabulated with the tectonic events that may have modified their observed geographic ranges. Southern California and the Baja California peninsula include tectonostratigraphic terranes and tectonic slivers that may have moved on the order of hundreds or thousands of kilometers in the Paleogene. Relations between recently dispersed faunas and tectonic terrane boundaries are further complicated by short-term variations in oceanographic phenomena such as currents, El Nino events, and shifts in areas of upwelling.
Lyropecten evolved in the late Oligocene or early Miocene, Nodipecten by the late middle Miocene. According to the classification used here, Lyropecten still lives in the Galapagos. Holocene Nodipectens divide the Pacific-Panamic and Caribbean provinces into two subprovinces each. Habitat, life history, dispersal, and growth data are summarized for living Nodipectens, whose distinctive shell features include ledges and hollow nodes. Phylogenetic lineages are based on progressive trends in node formation and rib schemes, some of which have biostratigraphic significance.
Publication type | Report |
---|---|
Publication Subtype | USGS Numbered Series |
Title | Cenozoic giant pectinids from California and the Tertiary Caribbean Province: Lyropecten, "Macrochlamis," Vertipecten, and Nodipecten species |
Series title | Professional Paper |
Series number | 1391 |
DOI | 10.3133/pp1391 |
Year Published | 1991 |
Language | English |
Publisher | U.S. Government Printing Office |
Description | v, 155 p. |
Google Analytic Metrics | Metrics page |