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1.
Rev. biol. trop ; 69(supl. 1)mar. 2021.
Article in Spanish | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1507787

ABSTRACT

Introducción: El noroeste de Costa Rica representa un área con una alta riqueza geológica que evidencia rocas generadas en diferentes ambientes, como plano abisal, talud continental, plataforma continental, volcánicos continentales efusivos y explosivos, volcánicos submarinos, costeros, erosivos fluviales, erosivos gravitatorios, de intrusión y el manto terrestre. Objetivo: Describir el contexto geológico actual del noroeste de Costa Rica, mediante el análisis y recopilación de datos de campo, geoquímicos, petrológicos, estructurales, paleontológicos y radiométricos con el fin de reconstruir los eventos y etapas de deformación desde el Jurásico a la actualidad. Métodos: Se hizo una recopilación bibliográfica de estudios en diversas ramas geológicas para establecer un estado del arte del extremo noroeste de Costa Rica. Resultados: La historia geológica representa el registro en rocas desde el Jurásico al Holoceno - actualidad con once etapas definidas a partir de interpretaciones petrológicas, estructurales, geocronológicas, estratigráficas y paleontológicas agrupadas en tres etapas de depositación y afectadas por cuatro fases tectónicas compresivas. Conclusiones: Las etapas de depositación corresponden con una primera etapa magmática con afinidad oceánica entre el Jurásico y el Cretácico Superior, una segunda etapa predominantemente sedimentaria con un rango de edad entre el Cretácico Superior y el Oligoceno, y por último una etapa volcánica efusiva - explosiva ubicada desde el Plioceno hasta la actualidad. Las fases tectónicas se asocian con diferentes eventos entre placas. La primera se dio en el Cretácico Inferior y su principal resultado visible fue la emersión de la Ofiolita de Santa Elena; la segunda sucedió del Cretácico Superior temprano al Campaniano y su reconocimiento está ligado a la posición actual de la Ofiolita de Santa Elena y sus estructuras circundantes; la tercera fase aconteció desde el Eoceno Superior hasta el Mioceno y su principal producto fue la generación del tren de pliegues sedimentarios del Golfo de Santa Elena a bahía de Salinas; y por último se presenta una fase Cuaternaria que originó el eje de basculamiento de los productos piroclásticos frente a la cordillera volcánica de Guanacaste.


Introduction: The Costa Rican northwestern coastline has a wide geological uniqueness that exhibits rocks from different environments such as abyssal plane, continental slope, continental platform, volcanic eruptions (effusive, explosive, and submarine), coastal, erosional (fluvial and gravitatory), intrusions, and upper mantle rocks. Objective: To present the geologic state of the art of the northwestern coastline of Costa Rica through the bibliographic review of geochemical, petrologic, structural, paleontological and geochronological data. Methods: A bibliographic revision was done to propose a state of the art of northwestern coastline of Costa Rica. Results: The geologic record shows eleven stages from the Jurassic to the Holocene. These stages were regrouped from petrologic, structural, geochronologic, stratigraphic and paleontological interpretations in three depositional stages and four compressive tectonic phases. Conclusions: The first depositional stage is volcanic with oceanic affinity between the Jurassic and Upper Cretaceous. The second has a sedimentary predominance with an age range between the Upper Cretaceous and the Miocene. The last depositional stage is a volcanic (effusive and explosive) from the Pliocene until the present. The tectonic phases are associate with different interactions between tectonic plates. The first phase triggered the Santa Elena Ophiolite obduction during the Early Cretaceous. The second phase occurred in the Early Upper Cretaceous - Campanian and is recognized by its current position and surrounding structures. The third phase lasted from the Upper Eocene until the Miocene and its main result was the folding of the Bahía de Salinas sedimentary rocks. Finally, the Quaternary phase created a tilt axis and the aperture for the deposition of pyroclastic density currents in front of the Guanacaste volcanic ridge.

2.
Rev. biol. trop ; 49(Supl.2): 195-201, dic. 2001. mapas, ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-502396

ABSTRACT

A new species of scleractinian coral is described: Euphyllia donatoi. This is the first report of this genus from Central America. The outcrop is located on the north-west of Costa Rica. It consists of large colonies (1.2 m high by 0.5 m in diameter), from a patch reef which had a dendroid habit. They are part of a very distintive facies in a micritic limestones of the Barra Honda Formation (Paleogene). The finding is important because these are the only macrofossils found in Barra Honda Formation. The growth took place under unstable ecological conditions resulting in a low diversity autocthonous community. It probably developed in very shallow water with a high sedimentation rate.


Subject(s)
Animals , Anthozoa/classification , Calcium Carbonate , Costa Rica , Fossils
3.
Rev. biol. trop ; 49(Supl.2): 179-183, dic. 2001.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-502397

ABSTRACT

Three fossil coral samples (Pocillopora elegans and Pocillopora damicornis) were collected from a beachrock in Puerto Escondido, central Pacific coast of Costa Rica. The age of the samples ranged from 1272+/-60 to 2010+/-60 years BP. They represent some of the few Holocene fossil corals known from the Pacific coast of the Americas. The uplift rate for the central Pacific coast of Costa Rica was calculated in 0.4 to 2.1 mm year(-1).


Subject(s)
Animals , Anthozoa , Fossils , Costa Rica
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