Laguna del Hunco Formation


The Laguna del Hunco Formation or Laguna del Hunco Tuff is a localized Early Eocene fossiliferous geological formation of the Cañadón Asfalto Basin in central Patagonia, Argentina. The thick formation comprises tuffaceous mudstones and sandstones deposited in a crater lake environment and crops out at Laguna del Hunco in the northwestern Chubut Province.
The formation has been precisely dated to 52.22 ± 0.22 Ma on the basis of sanidine crystals in the tuffs of the formation. The Laguna del Hunco formation overlies the Barda Colorada Ignimbrite and is covered by the Sarmiento Group. The unit is renowned for the preservation of an extraordinarily rich fossil flora assemblage of mixed South American families and presently uniquely Australasian flora, among which the oldest Eucalyptus fossils found worldwide. The formation also has provided many fossil insects, including insect eggs, fossil fish of Bachmannia chubutensis and the frog Shelania pascuali. Periodic bursts of gas in the volcanic crater lake are thought to have produced the sudden death and preservation of the floral and faunal assemblage.

Description

The Laguna del Hunco Formation, named after Laguna del Hunco, a desert pond in Chubut Province, is a localized sedimentary unit comprising tuffaceous sandstones and mudstones with primary and reworked ashfall layers. The formation was deposited in a crater lake environment. The approximately thick formation forms part of the Middle Chubut River Volcanic Pyroclastic Complex of the western Cañadón Asfalto Basin. This complex comprises a variety of volcaniclastic, intrusive, pyroclastic, and extrusive rocks, deposited over several million years. The complex is characterized by a great variety of volcanogenic bodies, such as ignimbrites, domes, lava flows, necks, intrusives, tuffs, and volcaniclastic deposits, all of them frequently interbedded.
The Laguna del Hunco Formation was formerly included in the Huitrera Formation, overlies the Barda Colorada Ignimbrite, and is overlain by the Sarmiento Group. The formation has been dated using 40Ar/39Ar analysis on sanidine crystals of the ash beds to 52.22 ± 0.22 Ma, placing the deposits in the Early Eocene, or Casamayoran in the SALMA classification.

Paleontological significance

The paleoflora of the formation is considered one of the most biodiverse Cenozoic fossil deposits worldwide. The biota is composed of extraordinarily rich assemblages of ferns, conifers, and flowering plants, many of which have not yet been formally described. The flora of the formation, studied since the 1920s, was formerly thought to be Miocene in age.
Three described species in the genus Gymnostoma of the family Casuarinaceae, and the species Ceratopetalum edgardoromeroi of the family Cunoniaceae are the only members of these families found outside of Australasia. The floral assemblage is though to represent a lakeshore vegetation, deposited during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum, with estimated average yearly temperatures of and annual rainfall of. Periodic gas bursts in the crater lake of Laguna del Hunco probably led to the sudden deaths of the flora and fauna found in the formation.

Fossil content

The following fossils have been described from the formation:
ClassGroupFossilsImagesNotes
VertebratesFrogsShelania pascuali
VertebratesFishBachmannia chubutensis
InvertebratesInsectsAustropanorpodes gennaken
InvertebratesInsectsAustroperilestes hunco
InvertebratesInsectsChinchekoala qunita
InvertebratesInsectsFrenguellia iglesiasi
InvertebratesInsectsFrenguellia patagonica
InvertebratesInsectsHuncoaeshna corrugata
InvertebratesInsectsSatelitala soberana
InvertebratesInsectsUrocerus patagonicus
IchnofossilsInsect eggsPaleoovoidus rectus
FloraAraucariaceaeAraucaria pichileufensis
FloraCycadsAustrozamia stockeyi
FloraCunoniaceaeCeratopetalum edgardoromeroi
FloraEscalloniaceaeEscallonia
FloraMyrtaceaeEucalyptus
FloraMyrtaceaeEucalyptus
FloraGinkgoaceaeGinkgo patagonica
FloraCasuarinaceaeGymnostoma archangelskyi
FloraCasuarinaceaeGymnostoma argentinum
FloraCasuarinaceaeGymnostoma patagonicum
FloraProteaceaeLomatia occidentalis
FloraProteaceaeLomatia preferruginea
FloraPodocarpaceaePodocarpus andiniformis
FloraRipogonaceaeRipogonum americanum
FloraOsmundaceaeTodea amissa