Okeechobean Sea
The Okeechobean Sea was a Cenozoic eutropical subsea, which along with the Choctaw Sea, occupied the eastern Gulf of Mexico basin system bounding Florida.
Location
The Okeechobean Sea was named for Lake Okeechobee of southern Early Oligocene Florida. It occupied southern Florida from what is now Tampa, Florida, to the Kissimmee River and to Martin County on the east and southward across the Everglades to the tip of Florida. The Okeechobean survived until the Pleistocene making it the longest-lived paleosea in eastern North America.The Okeechobean Sea was divided further into two groups of a combined 10 subseas based upon marine fauna. These subseas were named:
- Dade Subsea
- Tampa Subsea
- Arcadia Subsea
- Murdock Subsea
- Tamiami Subsea
- Charlotte Subsea
- Caloosahatchee Subsea
- Laxahatchee Subsea
- Lake Worth Subsea
- Belle Glade Subsea
Subseas
Dade Subsea
- Period: Oligocene.
- Geologic stage: Rupelian through early Chattian. ~33.9—28.4 Ma., approximately ~.
- Animal age: Orellan through Geringian. ~33.9—26.3 Ma.
- Post-Dade dry period: ~28.0—23 Ma. A moderate icehouse climate followed by an ice age lasting most of the Chattian ~28.4—23.03 Ma.
Basilosaurus cetoides and Zygorhiza, early toothed whales, as well as Protosiren, an extinct ancestor of the manatee, inhabit these waters and are the earliest mammal fossils uncovered with specimens from Citrus County in dolomite dating to ~40—37 Ma. and Marion County, Florida dating from 37.2—33.9 Ma.
Tampa Subsea
- Period: Late Oligocene—Early Miocene.
- Geologic stage: Chattian through early Aquitanian stage of the Miocene ~28.4—23.03 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Arikareean. ~30.8—20.6 Ma.
- Post-Tampa dry period: Late Aquitanian through early Burdigian ~23.0—20.5 Ma.
The Gulf Trough closed between Georgia and Florida forming the complete peninsula allowing southward movement of Florida's first land mammals such as the early canids Enhydrocyon, Osbornodon, and Phlaocyon preying upon the proto-horse Miohippus, deer-like Hypertragulidae, and the extinct camel, Nothokemas. The fossil record shows that land animals entered the newly formed peninsula with the earliest land mammals unearthed in Hernando, County dating from ~24.8 Ma.
Arcadia Subsea
- Period: Miocene.
- Geologic stage: Burdigalian through early Serravallian stages ~20.43—13.6 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Hemingfordian through Barstovian ~20.3—13.6 Ma.
- Post-Arcadia dry period:' Early Serravallian ~13.65—12.0 Ma.
The Arcadia begins to regress with a very short dry period lasting possibly 1 million years. During this time the Middle Miocene Disruption continues. Forests slowly draw in massive amounts of carbon dioxide, gradually lowering the level of atmospheric CO2 to approximately 100 ppmv.
Metaxytherium floridanum a form of manatee, and long beaked dolphin swam this subsea.
The fossil of Mesoplodon longirostris is found on the Miami Terrace dating to ~15.97—11.61 Ma.
Polk Subsea
- Period: Middle Miocene.
- Geologic stage: Late Serravallian through early Tortonian ~12.00—11.6 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Clarendonian ~13.6—10.3 Ma through Hemphillian ~10.3—4.9 Ma.
- Post-Polk dry period: Early Tortonian, approximately ~11.6—9.0 Ma.
Sperm whale, 9.1—9.0 Ma. Fossil specimen found in the Amalgamated Phosphate Mine; Brewster Phosphate Mine, Polk County, Florida.
Charlotte Subsea
- Period: Late Miocene.
- Geologic stage: Late Tortonian through early Messinian ~8.0—6.0 Ma. ±, approximately.
- Animal age: Hemphillian ~10.3—4.9 Ma.
- Post-Charlotte dry period: The late Messinian through Zanclean ~5.332—3.6 Ma. experienced a somewhat long dry period. A major event was the Messinian salinity crisis or dry Mediterranean. It was replenished with the Zanclean flood which raised the worldwide sea level 10 meters or 33 feet.
Fossils of the beaked whale, river dolphin, and a form of toothed whale dating to ~7.9—7.8 Ma. are uncovered in Polk County.
Murdock Subsea
- Period: Early to mid Pliocene.
- Geologic stage: Early Zanclean. ~5.332—3.6 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Late Hemphillian through late Blancan ~4.9—1.8 Ma.
- Post-Murdock dry period: Piacenzian through Holocene ~2.588 Ma. —present. The Northern Hemisphere is in a full ice age which begins to retreat around 11,000 years ago.
Balaenoptera floridana and Delphinidae were found in Lee County. and Bone Valley Formation.
Tamiami Subsea
- Period: Pliocene.
- Geologic stage: Late Zanclean through late Piacenzian, ~3.6—2.588 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Blancan
- Post-Tamiami dry period: The Northern Hemisphere moves into Wisconsin Ice Age.
During the Tamiami Subsea's creation, the basin of the Everglades was encompassed by the Everglades Pseudoatoll. This feature's north side supported mangrove jungles and estuaries extending to the mainland and Kissimmee Embayment. The east, west, and south were created by reefs and islands of over 100 species of coral which grew atop the Hawthornian oyster and barnacle bars. The Nashua Lagoon System extends along the entire east coast of Florida.
Caloosahatchee Subsea
- Period: Pliocene to Pleistocene.
- Geologic stage: Late Piacenzian ~2.8 Ma. to late Calabrian ~780,000, approximately.
- Animal age: Blancan to Irvingtonian ~4.9 Ma.—240,000 years ago.
During the late Calabrian, ~1.8 Ma.—780,000 years ago, temperatures plunged to that or possibly colder than the Messinian-Zanclean with the Caloosahatchee basin rising and filling with rock and mineral deposits. All of the paleoseas experienced mass extinction of endemic species.
Loxahatchee Subsea
- Period: Pleistocene.
- Geologic stage: Pre-Illinoian ~2.427—1.816 Ma., approximately.
- Animal age: Blancan ~4.9—1.8 Ma.
- Post-Loxahatchee dry period: Pre-Illinoian ~1.8 Ma.—302,000 years ago.
The Okeechobean Sea experienced the last deposits of sediments allowing the Loxahatchee Subsea as well as the Kissimmee Valley and Okeechobee Plain to fill and become 50% covered with mangrove forests. This new Loxahatchee Subsea was filled with mangrove islands. The mangrove islands of southwest Florida are reduced to coastal swamps. On the eastern side of the new Loxahatchee Subsea, reefs became wide islands covered with pines and palmettos with deep water surrounding them. A lagoon was created on the east with warmer water than surrounding water creating a refuge for corals and mollusks which became extinct along the eastern U.S. coastline.
In the west, Immokolee Island had been created from banks and reefs. To the east lay Miccosukee Island south of where Lake Okeechobee is currently. The Tomeu Islands were near future western Palm Beach County All three islands were covered with pine and palmetto forests. Flanking the Tomeu Islands on the west was the Capeletti Reef Tract. The southeastern and Atlantic facing part of the peninsula supported the Miami and Palm Beach Archipelagos. Connected and to the south of that and what would be the future Florida Keys was the Monroe Reef Tract.
Belle Glade Subsea
- Period: Pleistocene.
- Geologic stage: Illinoian ~300,000—75,000 years ago.
- Animal age: Irvingtonian to Rancholabrean ~1.8 Ma.—11,000 years ago.
- Post-Belle Glade dry period: Illinoian glaciation. ~300,000—130,000 years ago.
Lake Worth Subsea
- Period: Pleistocene.
- Geologic stage: Late Sangamonian through late Illinoian ~300,000—75,000 years ago.
- Animal age: Irvingtonian to Rancholabrean ~1.8 Ma.—11,000 years ago.
- Post-Lake Worth dry period: Wisconsin glaciation, ~110,000—9,700 years ago.
The Lake Worth Subsea was the last flooding stage of this area. It regressed during the Wisconsin Ice Age and infilled to become a shallow basin creating the Everglades.