Paja
Description
Source: Wikipédia
The Paja Formation (Spanish: Formación Paja, K1p, Kip, Kimp, b3b6p) is an Early Cretaceous geologic formation of central Colombia. The formation extends across the northern part of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, the Western Colombian emerald belt and surrounding areas of the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes. In the subsurface, the formation is found in the Middle Magdalena Valley to the west. The Paja Formation stretches across four departments, from north to south the southernmost Bolívar Department, in Santander, Boyacá and the northern part of Cundinamarca. Well known fossiliferous outcrops of the formation occur near Villa de Leyva, also written as Villa de Leiva, and neighboring Sáchica.
The formation was named after Quebrada La Paja in Betulia, Santander, and stretches across 450 kilometres (280 mi) from northeast to southwest. The Paja Formation overlies the Ritoque and Rosablanca Formations and is overlain by the San Gil Group and the Simití and Tablazo Formations and dates from the late Hauterivian to late Aptian. The Paja Formation comprises mudstones, shales and nodules of sandstones and limestones, deposited in an anoxic environment, in the warm and shallow sea that covered large parts of the present Colombian territory during the Cretaceous.
Initially considered to host Colombian emeralds, the emerald-bearing part was redefined as a separate formation; the Muzo Formation. The Paja Formation Lagerstätte is famous for its vertebrate fossils and is the richest Mesozoic fossiliferous formation of Colombia. Several marine reptile fossils of plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, ichthyosaurs and turtles have been described from the formation and it hosts the only dinosaur fossils described in the country to date; Padillasaurus. The formation also has provided many ammonites, fossil flora, decapods and the fossil shark Protolamna ricaurtei.
Découvertes
Source: The Paleobiology Database
Site(s) correspondant(s) à cette formation: 2La Tordolla, Villa de Leiva : Boyacá - Ricaurte 56195 77007
Exact locality unknown, but from the La Tordolla area, in the Vereda Monquirá, northeast of Villa de Leiva town, Department of Boyacá, Ricaurte Province, ColombiaVilla de Leiva tracksite : Boyacá - Ricaurte 77008 77009
near Villa de Leiva (Villa de Leyva), Boyacá
Publication(s)
La base comprend 4 publication(s).
Source: The Paleobiology Database
- ↑1 2 J. L. Carballido, D. Pol, and M. L. Parra Ruge, S. Padilla Bernal, M. E. Páramo-Fonseca, F. Etayo-Serna. 2015. A new Early Cretaceous brachiosaurid (Dinosauria, Neosauropoda) from northwestern Gondwana (Villa de Leiva, Colombia). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 35(5):e980505:1-12 (https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2015.980505)
- ↑1 L. F. Noè, M. Gómez-Pérez, and J. V. Rodríguez, A. Corrales-García, W. G. Caranton-Mateus. 2020. Dinosaur footprints from the Lower Cretaceous, Batá Formation, Colombia (South America), and the possible interchange of large ornithopods between southern Laurasia and northern Gondwana. The Geology of Colombia, Volume 2. Mesozoic. Servicio Geológico Colombiano, Publicaciones Geológicas Especiales 36:375-401 (https://doi.org/10.32685/pub.esp.36.2019.11)
- ↑1 2 M. Moreno-Sánchez, A. Gómez Cruz, and J. Gómez Tapias. 2011. Reporte de huellas de dinosaurios en el Santuario de Fauna y Flora de Iguaque, en cercanías de Chíquiza (Boyacá, Colombia) [Report of dinosaur tracks in the Iguaque Fauna and Flora Sanctuary, in the environs of Chiquiza (Boyacá, Colombia)]. Boletín de Geología 33(2):107-118
- ↑1 M. Moreno-Sánchez and A. d. J. Gómez-Cruz. 2013. Huellas de dinosaurios en Colombia: revisión y nuevos hallazgos [Dinosaur tracks in Colombia: revision and new discoveries]. II Simposio Latinoamericano de Icnología. Abstracts
