Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Ranquil Formation

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Type
  
Geological formation

Named for
  
Caleta Ranquil

Region
  
Bío Bío Region

Underlies
  
Tubul Formation

Country
  
Chile

Named by
  
Juan Tavera, 1942

Overlies
  
Lebu Group

Other
  
Conglomerate with sand matrix

Primary
  
Breccia, Sandstone, Siltstone, Mudstone

Ranquil Formation (Spanish: Formación Ranquil) is a Miocene and Pliocene sedimentary formation located in Arauco Province in south–central Chile, including outcrops in Mocha Island. The formation has its greatest thicknesses in the south-west, where its sediments were largely deposited in marine conditions. It overlies unconformably sedimentary formations of the Paleocene-Eocene Lebu Group. The formation is part of the fill of Arauco Basin which is a sedimentary basin that extends south of Concepción.

Contents

Macrofossils of the formation are similar to those of Navidad (34° S) and Lacui Formation (43° S) two nearby Miocene marine formations.

The base of Ranquil Formation is the so-called "main unconformity", which is thought to have formed by erosion during a period of tectonic inversion.

The formation was first defined in 1942 by Juan Tavera.

Units

The formation has been subdivided into five units, with the lowermost being made up of sandstone and shale, and the second lowest one being made up of a conglomerate. The middle unit is made up of mudrock and massive sandstone. At some places the middle unit is overlain by a unit made up of sandstone with thin layers of conglomerate and sandstone that has been bioturbated. The uppermost unit include a breccia and the so-called Huenteguapi sandstone. The sediments of Huenteguapi sandstone evidences that a megatsunami struck the coast of south–central Chile in the Pliocene.

Fossil content

Ranquil Formation contains the following trace fossils: Zoophycos, Chondrites, Phycosiphon, Nereites missouriensis, Lockeiasiliquaria, Parataenidium, Ophiomorpha, Rhizocorallium and possibly also Psammichnites.

References

Ranquil Formation Wikipedia