Ituzaingó Formation


The Ituzaingó Formation, in older literature also described as Entre Ríos or Entrerriana Formation, is an extensive geological formation of Late Miocene age in the Paraná Basin of the Corrientes, Santa Fe and Entre Ríos Provinces in Mesopotamia, northeastern Argentina. The formation comprises mudstones, cross-bedded sandstones and conglomerates deposited in a fluvio-deltaic environment and is renowned for the preservation of a rich fossil assemblage, including many mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, bivalves, foraminifera, ichnofossils and flora.

Description

The Ituzaingó Formation was first described by De Alba in 1953 and later by Herbst in 1971. The up to, but in most areas between thick formation is found in an area of, stretching from the Paraná River to east of Tostado. The Ituzaingó Formation crops out in the northeasternmost part of Argentina, in the provinces of Corrientes, Santa Fe and Entre Ríos, among other locations along the banks of the Paraná River.

Stratigraphy

The formation overlies the marine Paraná Formation and is unconformably overlain by the Puerto Alvear, Hernandarías and Yupoí Formations of Early Pleistocene age. At the shores of the Paraná River, the formation underlies the Timbúes Formation. In certain places along the same river, the formation cuts into the underlying Rosario Formation.
The formation contains a basal conglomeratic member "Conglomerado osífero" with abundant vertebrate remains. This conglomerate is overlain by almost unfossiliferous whitish to yellow brown sandstones and green mudstones. The Ituzaingó Formation was correlated with the Puelches Formation of the subsurface of Buenos Aires Province. According to the mammals occurring in the conglomerate and the stratigraphic relationships, the age of the base of Ituzaingo Formation is almost exclusively Tortonian or Huayquerian in the SALMA classification.

Depositional environment

The formation, as the Paraná and Puelches Formations, has been deposited in a vast Miocene tidal flat environment. Both the terrestrial and freshwater fauna of the Ituzaingó Formation indicates a climate warmer than present. The freshwater vertebrate record suggests important basin connections with Amazonian basins.
Alternatively, the Conglomerado Osífero Member has been interpreted as tide-dominated fluvial channels, pertaining to the marine Paraná Formation.

Fossil content

The Ituzaingó Formation has provided a large variety of fossils, of various groups, from mammals to birds and reptiles to fish and flora. The terrestrial fauna is predominant while a few marine genera are also present. The presence of typical Amazonian freshwater fish and absence of austral fauna in both the underlying Paraná and the Ituzaingó Formation suggests a connection with northern areas of South America. The faunas has been correlated to the older Miocene faunas of the Honda Group at La Venta in Colombia, the Urumaco Formation at Urumaco in Venezuela and the Pebas Formation of the Amazon region of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil. Several ground sloth genera present in the Ituzaingó Formation are endemic from this unit, whereas other are also present in the Arroyo Chasicó Formation of Buenos Aires Province, the Andalhuala and Corral Quemado Formations of Catamarca Province, and the Toro Negro Formation of La Rioja Province.

Mammals

Typotheres