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The late Miocene Panama isthmian strait

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors infer that a jet of the Pacific North Equatorial Countercurrent-Equatorial Undercurrent passed through the Panama isthmian strait to deposit these sediments on the Caribbean side.
Abstract
Miocene sediments of the Caribbean Gatun and Chagres formations, Panama Canal basin, were deposited within an archipelagic strait that connected Caribbean and Pacific waters. Shallow-water (∼ 25 m) benthic foraminifera of the Gatun Formation have a strong Caribbean affinity, indicating that a significant interoceanic, biogeographic barrier had formed at ∼ 8 Ma. However, benthic foraminifera of the overlying Chagres Formation are bathyal and markedly Pacific in affinity, indicating that at ∼ 6 Ma, waters of the Panama isthmian strait deepened to ∼ 200–500 m and Pacific bathyal waters flowed into the Caribbean. The Chagres Formation crops out at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal in a large wedge of cross-laminated sandstone and coquina. The cross-laminations and coarse grain size indicate high-energy currents atypical of bathyal settings. We infer that a jet of the Pacific North Equatorial Countercurrent–Equatorial Undercurrent passed through the Panama isthmian strait to deposit these sediments on the Caribbean side. This later entry of Pacific taxa into the Caribbean had no apparent effect on the subsequent composition of Caribbean faunas.

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Effect of the formation of the Isthmus of Panama on Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation

TL;DR: In this paper, stable-isotope and carbonate sand-fraction records from Caribbean sediments were used to investigate the timing and consequences of the emergence of the Isthmus of Panama, which closed the seaway between the North andSouth American continents.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Great American Schism: Divergence of Marine Organisms After the Rise of the Central American Isthmus

TL;DR: After a 12-million-year process, the Central American Isthmus was completed 2.8 My ago and launched marine organisms of the two oceans into independent evolutionary trajectories and those that did not go extinct have diverged.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population structure and speciation in tropical seas: global phylogeography of the sea urchin diadema

TL;DR: The phylogeny of the pantropical and subtropical sea urchin genus Diadema is reconstructed, using sequences of mitochondrial DNA from 482 individuals collected around the world, to determine the efficacy of barriers to gene flow and to ascertain the history of possible dispersal and vicariance events that led to speciation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Geology of the Darien, Panama, and the late Miocene-Pliocene collision of the Panama arc with northwestern South America

TL;DR: The geology of the Darien province of eastern Panama is presented through a new geologic map and detailed biostratigraphic and paleobathymetric analysis of its Upper Cretaceous to upper Miocene sediments as discussed by the authors.
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