San Gregorio Formation, Venezuela Explained

San Gregorio Formation
Period:Pliocene
Age:Zanclean-Chibanian
(Chapadmalalan-Lujanian)
~
Prilithology:Sandstone, mudstone
Otherlithology:Limestone
Country:
Unitof:Urumaco stratigraphic section
Subunits:Vergel MemberCocuiza Member
Overlies:Codore Formation
Thickness:~570m (1,870feet)
Map:San Gregorio Formation Map.webp

The San Gregorio Formation is a lithostratigraphic unit dating back to the Pliocene to Pleistocene of Venezuela. The formation is split into three members, the older Vergel Member (Late Pliocene to earliest Pleistocene), the Cocuiza Member (Pleistocene) and the Río Seco Member. During this time the region is thought to have been covered by a mixed environment of open grassland and forested areas surrounding a permanent freshwater system. The diverse fauna of the San Gregorio Formation, including a variety of freshwater fish, crocodilians, turtles and snakes, also includes many mammals interpreted to have been part of the first major wave of the Great American Interchange in addition to native clades such as glyptodonts, ground sloths and caviomorph rodents.[1]

Stratigraphy

The San Gregorio Formation overlies the Codore Formation and forms the most recent sequence of the stratigraphic section. Outcrops of this formation are found in Falcón State, northeast of the town of Urumaco. The formation is named for the town of San Gregorio, Venezuela.[1]

Robert Masterman Stainforth divided the San Gregorio Formation into three subsections. The oldest of these is the Vergel Member, composed of 260 meters of sandstone, mudstone and sparse conglomerates. In their study on the formation Carrillo-Briceño and colleagues determined a late Pliocene to earliest Pleistocene age. Overlying the Vergel Member is the Cocuiza Member, a sequence of 80 meters composed of sandstone, mudstone and limestone. Using strontium dating, an age between 0.709100 and 0.709342 Ma was determined for the Cocuiza Member. Some samples utilized suggested that they had been chemically altered, while two localities yielded an early Pleistocene age. The third member recognized by Stainforth is the Rio Seco Member, however it has not been dated by the 2021 study by Carrillo-Briceño and colleagues.[1]

Paleoenvironment

The fish fauna of the Vergel Member, showcasing a great abundance of catfish in particular, clearly shows that permanent rivers played a vital part in the environment of the Pliocene San Gregorio Formation. The stingray Potamotrygon in particular is commonly associated with flowing waters and sandy banks, although it can also be found in still waters. Overall the depositional environment may have been consisting of floodplains and braided rivers alongside a series of other environments. Swamps, ponds and flooded areas for instance are also possible and may have been home to armored catfish and swamp eels, whose modern members are known to inhabit oxygen-poor bodies of water. Aside from freshwater fish, some fossils also indicate the presence of animal's capable of tolerating a wider range of salt (such as Sciades), possibly indicating a proximity to marine environments. The presence of foraminiferans with low tolerance for saltwater supports this, suggesting that the region also featured estuaries. Frogs, podocnemidid turtles and caimans are all indicative of freshwater environments of varying nature, while Crocodylus falconensis could have easily inhabited areas closer to the coast. Matamata turtes meanwhile are generally associated with slow moving waters, marshes and swamps. Other animals found in the Vergel Member associated with bodies of water include freshwater molluscs and crabs, the False Coral Snake which requires humid soil and prehistoric relatives of the Capybara. This highly diverse fauna indicates that the Vergel member heavily featured permanent bodies of freshwater, likely rivers, as well as other slower moving bodies of water such as swamps, marshes and/or ponds.[1]

The terrestrial fauna features a variety of endemic South American mammals ranging from notoungulates, ground sloths, glyptodonts to smaller types of armadillos. These animals would suggest a forested-grassland environment, with the presence of the genus Corallus, a tree boa, clearly indicating the presence of forested areas. This is supported by the palynoflora, which shows the presence of plants associated with rainforests. However, the general size of seeds and fruits found in the Norte Casa Chiguaje locality is more in-line with open environments, ultimately suggesting an environment featuring both forested areas as well as more open grassland.[1]

The Cocuiza Member meanwhile represents a mostly marine environment following marine incurions in northern South America. The presence of sharks, echinoderms, oyster colonies and marine gastropods suggests a coastal setting. Fossils of terrestrial and freshwater fauna discovered in the San Gregorio Oeste del Pueblo (SGOP) Locality has been interpreted to represent carcasses that were washed into the ocean by streams and rivers of the backshore, supported by the disarticulated and fragmentary nature of most remains found in the Cocuiza Member. However, the fauna discovered in this member suggests that an environment similar to that of the older Vergel Member (forested grassland mixed with wetlands or permanent freshwater habitats) was found further inland, providing the locality with its freshwater and terrestrial fossil remains.[1]

The rainforest taxa recovered from the Vergel Member's flora are absent from the Cocuiza Member, suggesting that drying climate during the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition caused a great turnover in the flora of the northern neotropics.[1]

The composition of the Rio Seco Member suggests a fluvial environment.[1]

Paleoflora

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
Vergel Member
Vergel Member
Vergel Member
Vergel Member
Vergel Membergrasses resembling Chloroideae
Vergel Member

Paleofauna

Molluscs

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
Bivalvia indet.Vergel Member
Gastropoda indet.Vergel Member
cf. PlanorbidaeVergel Member
OstreidaeCocuiza Member

Echinoderms

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
Agassizia A. excentricaCocuiza Member
Arbacia A. punctulataCocuiza Member
Encope E. cf. emarginataCocuiza Member
Encope E. secoensisCocuiza Member
Mellitella M. falconensisCocuiza Member
Moira M. atroposCocuiza Member [2]

Fish

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
Actinopterygii indet.Vergel Memberabundant isolated material
cf. Amblydorascf. A. sp.Vergel Membera partial cleithrumthe first recorded fossil of the genus
Callichthyidae indet.Vergel Memberfin spine fragments and bony armor platesone or more species of armored catfish
Cichlidae indet.Vergel Memberfin spines
Doradidae indet.Vergel Memberfin spines, scutes and skull remainswhile some elements may represent Amblydoras and Scorpiodoras, other fossils may represent a third genus was present in the region
HopliasH. sp.Vergel Memberisolated teeth
Hypostominae indet.Vergel Memberfin spines fragments and dermal teethsome specimen are similar to Hemiancistrus, but are too fragmentary to be referred to the genus
Loricariidae indet.Vergel Memberparts of the pectoral spine and armor platesthe elements are too fragmentary to safely refer to Hypostominae that are present in the formation
cf. Megaleporinuscf. M. sp.Vergel Membertwo symphyseal premaxillary teeth
Myliobatiformes indet.Vergel Membera single isolated vertebra
MylossomaM. sp.Vergel Memberdentary teetha "pacu clade" serrasalmid
cf. Pimelodellacf. P. sp.Vergel Memberincomplete pectoral fin-spine
Pimeloidea indet.Vergel Memberpectoral spines
cf. Platysiluruscf. P. sp.Vergel Memberpectoral spines
PotamotrygonP. sp.Vergel Memberisolated teeth and caudal spines
Schizodoncf. S. cortiVergel Memberteeth of the premaxilla and dentary
cf. Sciadescf. S. sp.Vergel Membera fragmented dorsal spine
cf. Scorpiodorascf. S. sp.Vergel Membera partial cleithrumthe first recorded fossil of the genus
Serrasalmidae indet.Vergel Memberisolated teethpossibly one or several species of the "pacu" or "Myleus clade"
Siluriformes indet.Vergel Membereroded and isolated elements of the skull and postcrania
SynbranchusS. sp.Vergel Memberdentaries, a pharyngeal bone with teeth and vertebraea genus of swamp eel
BagreB. marinus [3] Cocuiza Member

Amphibians

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
Anura indet.Vergel Memberisolated cranial and postcranial elements
cf. Pipacf. P. sp.Vergel Membersacral vertebrae fused to a partial urostyle

Reptilians

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
AniliusA. scytaleVergel Memberincomplete trunk vertebrathe extant American Pipe Snake or False Coral Snake
Boidae indet.Vergel Memberisolated vertebraesimilar to the genus Epicrates
Boidae/Aniliidae indet.Vergel Memberincomplete trunk vertebra
Caimaninae indet.Vergel MemberCocuiza Membercranial and postcranial remains
ChelonoidisC. sp.Vergel Memberincomplete right femur
ChelusC. sp.Vergel Memberplastron fragmentA type of Mata mata turtle
Colubroides indet.Vergel Memberfragmentary trunk vertebra
CorallusC. sp.Vergel Memberincomplete trunk vertebraa moderately large tree boa
CrocodylusC. falconensisVergel Member
Podocnemididae indet.Vergel Membervarious postcranial remains
Serpentes indet.Vergel Memberfragmentary trunk vertebrae
Squamata indet.Vergel Memberfragmentary skullsnon-snake squamates
Testudines indet.Vergel Memberfragmentary skulls, shell and assorted other postcranial remains
Tupinambis s.l.T. sp.Vergel Memberdentary fragmenta large sized teiid lizard
Caimanaff. C. yacareCocuiza Membermaxillary fragment
Crocodylia indet.Vergel MemberCocuiza Membercoprolites, teeth, osteoderms and other bones
EunectesE. sp.Cocuiza Membertrunk vertebraa large anaconda

Mammals

NameSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImage
aff. Boreostemmaaff. B. sp.Vergel Membertwo osteoderms
?Caviomorpha indet.Vergel Memberisolated teeth and tooth fragments
Cricetidae indet.Vergel Membercurrently undescribed
Cyonasua[4] C. sp.Vergel Member
cf. Didelphiscf. D. sp.Vergel Memberpartial humerusa type of Opossum
FalcontoxodonF. sp.Vergel Memberteeth, ankle bones and a metatarsal
aff. Holmesinaaff. H. floridanusVergel MemberCocuiza Memberosteoderms
Hydrochoerinae indet.Vergel Memberfragmentary teeth
Hydrochoeropsis?Hydrochoeropsis wayuuVergel Membera dentary and molarsan extinct relative of the Capybara
Interatheriidae indet.Vergel Memberan isolated tooth crown
Mammalia indet.Vergel MemberCocuiza Membervarious postcranial remains
MariselaMarisela gregorianaVergel Memberan isolated molar
Mylodontidae indet.Vergel Memberright humerus
Neoepiblemidae indet.Vergel Memberdistal phalanx
aff. Plainaaff. P. sp.Vergel Memberosteoderm
Pliodasypus [5] Pliodasypus vergelianuVergel Member
cf. Proeremotheriumcf. P. sp.Vergel MemberCocuiza Membera nearly complete skull and an isolated tooth
Proterotheriidae indet.Vergel Membermetacarpal remains
Typotheria incerta sedisVergel Membera partial jaw
Camelidae indet.Cocuiza Membera fragmentary femur
ChapalmalaniaC. sp.Cocuiza Memberpartial hemimandiblea large bodied procyonid
Sirenia indet.Cocuiza Member
Toxodontidae indet.Cocuiza Memberteeth and a partial mandible
Xenarthra indet.Cocuiza Memberincomplete caudal vertebra

Notes and References

  1. Jorge D. . Carrillo-Briceño. Rodolfo. Sánchez. Torsten M. . Scheyer. Juan D. . Carrillo. Massimo . Delfino. Georgios L. . Georgalis. Leonardo . Kerber. Damián . Ruiz-Ramoni. José L. O. . Birindelli. Edwin-Alberto . Cadena, A. ldo F. . Rincón. Martin . Chavez-Hoffmeister. Alfredo A. . Carlini. Mónica R. . Carvalho. Raúl . Trejos-Tamayo. Felipe . Vallejo. Carlos . Jaramillo. Douglas S. . Jones. Marcelo R. . Sánchez-Villagra. 2021. A Pliocene–Pleistocene continental biota from Venezuela. Swiss Journal of Palaeontology. 140. 9. 9 . 10.1186/s13358-020-00216-6. 34721281 . 8550326 . 2021SwJP..140....9C . free .
  2. Mihaljeviü. M.. Klug. C.. Aguilera. O.. Lüthi. T.. Sánchez-Villagra. M.R.. 2010. PALAEODIVERSITY OF CARIBBEAN ECHINOIDS INCLUDING NEW MATERIAL FROM THE VENEZUELAN NEOGENE. Palaeontologia Electronica. 13. 36.
  3. Orangel. Aguileraa. Ricardo T.. Lopesb. Felix. Rodriguezc. Thaís M. . dos Santosb. Caroline . Rodrigues-Almeidaa. Paulo . Almeidaa. Alessandra S. . Machadob. Tailan. Moretti. 2020. Fossil sea catfish (Siluriformes; Ariidae) otoliths and in-skull otoliths from the Neogene of the Western Central Atlantic. Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 101. 102619. 10.1016/j.jsames.2020.102619. 2020JSAES.10102619A. 219045960. free.
  4. Forasiepi. A.M.. Soibelzon. L.H.. Gomez. C.S.. Sánchez. R.. Quiroz. L.I.. Jaramillo. C.. Sánchez-Villagra. M.R.. 2014 . Carnivorans at the Great American Biotic Interchange: new discoveries from the northern neotropics. Naturwissenschaften. 101. 11 . 965–974. 10.1007/s00114-014-1237-4. 25228347 . 2014NW....101..965F . 11336/32009 . 253635703 .
  5. Castro. M.C.. Carlini. A.A.. Sánchez. R.. Sánchez-Villagra. M.R.. 2014. A new Dasypodini armadillo (Xenarthra: Cingulata) from San Gregorio Formation, Pliocene of Venezuela: affinities and biogeographic interpretations. Naturwissenschaften. 101. 2 . 77–86. 10.1007/s00114-013-1131-5. 24414134 . 2014NW....101...77C . 253637167 .