This article presents the scientific rationale for an ambitious ICDP drilling project to continuously sample Late Cretaceous to modern sediment in four different sedimentary basins that transect the equatorial Amazon of Brazil, from the Andean foreland to the Atlantic Ocean. The goals of this project are to document the evolution of plant biodiversity in the Amazon forests and to relate biotic diversification to changes in the physical environment, including climate, tectonism, and the surface landscape. These goals require long sedimentary records from each of the major sedimentary basins across the heart of the Brazilian Amazon, which can only be obtained by drilling because of the scarcity of Cenozoic outcrops. The proposed drilling will provide the first long, nearly continuous regional records of the Cenozoic history of the forests, their plant diversity, and the associated changes in climate and environment. It also will address fundamental questions about landscape evolution, including the history of Andean uplift and erosion as recorded in Andean foreland basins and the development of west-to-east hydrologic continuity between the Andes, the Amazon lowlands, and the equatorial Atlantic. Because many modern rivers of the Amazon basin flow along the major axes of the old sedimentary basins, we plan to locate drill sites on the margin of large rivers and to access the targeted drill sites by navigation along these rivers.
The origin of the great biodiversity observed in tropical South America has spurred debate for well over a hundred years (Darwin, 1859; Agassiz and Agassiz, 1868; Wallace, 1878) and remains one of the foundational problems in modern science. Wallace (1878) suggested that low tropical extinction rates, resulting from a relatively equitable and stable tropical climate, enabled the progressive accumulation of species throughout the Cenozoic, a hypothesis that has been termed the “museum” model. In contrast, the “cradle” model (Stebbins, 1974) posits that most tropical diversity arose from episodic pulses of speciation associated with climatic and geological drivers (Richardson et al., 2001). Some propose that the majority of present-day species originated prior to the Pleistocene (Hoorn et al., 2010) and that species origination rates were shaped primarily by geological agents of vicariance, such as Andean uplift, tectonic arches, marine incursions, fluvial barriers, and the expansion of mega-wetlands. Others argue for significant Quaternary diversification, influenced by the temporal and spatial dynamism of regional climate (Rull, 2011). These different interpretations of the patterns and drivers of tropical biodiversity can best be resolved by recovering the entire Cenozoic record of plant diversity in the Amazon region itself and by placing these biotic data into a well-resolved geologic, climatic, phylogenetic, and biogeographic framework.
We propose an ambitious ICDP drilling project that will continuously sample Upper Cretaceous to modern sediment to 1–2 km depth at five sites in four different ancient sedimentary basins that transect the equatorial Amazon region of Brazil, from the Andean foreland to the Atlantic Ocean margin (Fig. 1). The overarching goals of this project are (1) to document the assembly of Amazon plant diversity across the entire basin throughout the entire history of the angiosperm-dominated megathermal forests, and (2) to determine how the evolution of the physical environment, including climate, tectonism, and landscape change, has shaped the generation and distribution of neotropical plant diversity and the origins of its species and higher-level taxa. These goals require long sedimentary records distributed across the continent, which, in most of the Amazon region, can only be obtained by drilling.
Geologic map of the Amazon region. Note that the newly revised geologic map of Brazil shows that the sedimentary cover of the Amazon basin is Cenozoic (not Cretaceous as shown here; see Caputo, 2011). Also shown are the locations of seismic lines in Figs. 2 and 3 and proposed drill sites. Drill site locations are shown for the Acre (AC), Solimões (SO), Amazon (AM), and Marajó (MA) basins. Each of these basins is separated from the adjoining basin by structural arches, as shown on the figure.
The Cenozoic geology of the westernmost (proximal Andean) and easternmost (offshore Foz do Amazonas basin) parts of the Amazon region is better known than that of the central Brazilian Amazon, where we propose to drill. In the far western Peruvian, Ecuadorean, and Colombian Amazon, ongoing uplift of Andean foreland basin sequences provides outcrops of Cenozoic sediments that are relatively easily accessed. Yet even here, complete and continuous sections are non-existent. Beyond the eastern limit of the Amazon region, on the Ceará Rise far offshore of the mouth of the Amazon, drilling during ODP Leg 154 recovered long sequences of sediment with some Amazonian provenance (Dobson et al., 2001; Harris and Mix, 2002). Even longer stratigraphic records were recovered in industry exploration wells on the Amazon slope and shelf, which were dated using marine microfossils. But these sections are poor records of continental history, because they are distal to the Amazon basin itself and because continental indicators of climate and biotic history are greatly diluted by marine influences. In the heart of the central Brazilian Amazon, Cenozoic outcrops are scarce, vegetation-covered, and deeply weathered – the critical sedimentary sequences are only available in the subsurface. And, despite extensive hydrocarbon exploration undertaken in this region, including many deep drill cores and thousands of kilometers of seismic lines, little is known about the non-petroleum-bearing shallow (Cenozoic age) part of the sedimentary record, which holds key information about the evolution of the modern rainforest and the establishment of the Amazon river drainage system. Most of the samples that are still available are decades old, composed only of cuttings, undated, in poor condition, and sometimes contaminated, and also relatively difficult to access even by Brazilian scientists. Thus, collecting continuous, fresh drill cores from the central Amazon region is critical.
In March 2015, we held a 3-day ICDP-sponsored workshop at the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia in Manaus, Brazil, to discuss the scientific framework for the TADP, to identify and begin to resolve technical and logistical issues, and to further develop the international team needed for carrying out the drilling and associated science. Thirty scientists from eight nations in the Americas and Europe attended. The first day included overview presentations on the history of the Amazon forest and its biodiversity and on the geologic history of the Amazon and Andes, as well as presentations on recent research results on more specific topics. The second day was devoted to small group discussions of methodological and logistical issues, followed by discussions on how to develop the drilling plans and effectively interface with ICDP, IODP, various Brazilian organizations, and other related international efforts. The final day featured a field trip led by Edgardo Latrubesse, visiting the flooded Igapó forests and white sand beaches along the Rio Negro, as well as the “Meeting of the Waters” at the confluence of the black-water Rio Negro and the white-water Rio Solimões.
South America is a continent, more so than any other, whose land surface is dominated by large rivers. Many of these modern rivers flow along the major axes of old sedimentary basins. The Brazilian Amazon region itself (Fig. 1) is largely comprised of a series of east–west trending basins that began accumulating sediments in the Paleozoic, overlying and bounded north and south by Precambrian continental basement rocks. From west to east these basins are the Acre, Solimões, Amazon, Marajó, and Foz do Amazonas (which includes the Amazon deep-sea fan); all of these basins have several kilometers of sediment fill (Cunha, 2007; Cunha et al., 2007; Figueiredo et al., 2007; Filho et al., 2007, Zalán and Matsuda, 2007). This geographic coincidence is significant for the proposed drilling, because it means that the modern Amazon river provides easy access to several different sites where, by drilling along the river margins, we can access nearly the entire Cenozoic history of the Amazon forest and its climate. Each of the Amazon sedimentary basins is separated from its neighbor by structural highs that displace basement rocks, have been reactivated many times in the Phanerozoic, and, in some cases, may remain active to the present day. From west to east these structural features are the Iquitos Arch, Purus Arch, Gurupá Arch, and an un-named structural high Amazon basin. Some of these features have previously been posited as topographic highs that played a role in the development of Amazon trans-continental drainage (Figueiredo et al., 2009) or the origins of Amazon biodiversity (Patton et al., 2000; Ribas et al., 2011).
In the Cretaceous, the South American continent occupied nearly the same latitude as today, but its tropical forests were dominated by gymnosperms and ferns and hence were completely different than modern forests (Morley, 2000; Graham, 2011; Jaramillo, 2012). The rise of angiosperms in the Early Cretaceous initiated major changes in the structure, function, and composition of the forest, changes that may have been influenced by the nearby Chicxulub impact event at the Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary. That event and the ensuing cascade of environmental responses brought about extinction of an estimated 48–70 % of the neotropical terrestrial plant species (de la Parra, 2009). The subsequent expansion of angiosperm megathermal forests has been linked to greenhouse climates (Morley, 2000; Fine and Ree, 2006), and studies from northern South America suggest that species diversity of forest plants increased in the early Cenozoic under warm conditions (Jaramillo et al., 2006), with the development of the neotropical rainforest at the onset of the Eocene (Morley, 2000). Palynofloral data from multiple sections in Colombia and Venezuela that span the Paleocene through Early Miocene (65 to 20 Ma) suggest maximum diversity at the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) as a result of rapid plant diversification and biogeographic mixing (Jaramillo et al., 2006, 2010), followed by a subsequent decline, a pattern that mirrors global temperature reconstructions (Jaramillo et al., 2006). At least on the face of it, given the scant data, it appears that the early–mid-Cenozoic climatic “optimum” was an evolutionary “optimum”, inviting the suggestion that rainforest plant taxa may survive and thrive in future global warming scenarios (Willis et al., 2010; Dick et al., 2013). Yet all of these studies of palynofloral diversity through time were undertaken outside the margins of the modern Amazon basin itself. Furthermore, no Paleogene sediments have been recovered and described from the Brazilian Amazon, and the published data from Neogene sequences from exploration wells and outcrops are largely from western Amazonia (Hoorn, 1993; Silva-Caminha et al., 2010). Thus, our knowledge of the history of the forests and forest diversity in the core of the Amazon Basin, and the associated climate history, is almost nonexistent. Recovering, dating, and analyzing Paleogene sediments from the drill cores for the first time is a major objective of this project.
A fundamental premise of much previous research on the history of South American tropical forests is that Andean surface uplift played a major role in the origin and distribution of neotropical biodiversity (Hoorn et al., 2010). Andean uplift sundered populations east and west, promoting their biological differentiation; it created new high-elevation habitats; it altered precipitation patterns and amounts; and it provided nutrients to the adjacent lowland rivers and forests.
The Andes developed along a Cenozoic convergent margin, where the oceanic
Nazca plate subducts beneath South America. The Andes of Ecuador, Peru, and
Bolivia consist of two parallel ranges: the Western Cordillera (WC) magmatic
arc and the Eastern Cordillera (EC) fold-thrust belt. The timing of surface
uplift and its spatial variation remain very poorly known, particularly in
the case of the WC. Recent investigations in southern Peru suggest that
modern WC elevations were attained about
Much of western Amazonia was composed of actively subsiding foreland basins from the early Cenozoic to the present and, throughout this time, received sediments eroded from the Andes. In the early Cenozoic, the Amazon basin may have drained westward, then northward, while only the eastern third of the craton drained toward the Atlantic. At some later time, with estimates ranging widely between Miocene and Pleistocene, the Amazon system became a transcontinental fluvial basin (Hoorn et al., 2010; Latrubesse et al., 2010), and Andean sediments first reached the Atlantic basin.
Prior to establishment of trans-Amazon drainage, by some accounts, the Purus Arch (Fig. 1) formed the western limit of proto-Amazon drainage, possibly as late as the Pleistocene (Vega et al., 2006; Mapes, 2009). A counter point of view is that the Purus Arch was tectonically inactive during all of the Cenozoic and played no role as a drainage divide. Instead, it may have been the Gurupá Arch (Fig. 1), having undergone more than 5 km of total uplift since the opening of the Atlantic (Caputo, 2011), which was the key hydrologic barrier to eastward flow of the early Amazon. Yet the role of the Gurupá Arch in Amazon hydrology and biogeography has never been discussed in the literature.
During the Miocene, sedimentary sequences of the Pebas Formation in Peru or the equivalent Solimões Formation in Brazil reached a maximum thickness of 1100 m in the Acre Basin. However, interpretations of the age and depositional environment of these sediments are varied and controversial. Wesselingh (2006) argued for the existence of a long-lived (15 Ma) freshwater mega-lake or mega-wetland bisecting western Amazonia during the entire Early and Middle Miocene. Several studies from the early 1990s (Nutall, 1990; Hoorn, 1993) suggested that recurrent marine transgressions into the Amazon basin occurred during global sea-level high stands of the Miocene, and Räsänen et al. (1995) proposed that these extended all the way to southern Peru in the Late Miocene. In more recent literature, marine incursions or tidal influences of variable timing and spatial extent have been posited in multiple sedimentary models for Amazonia (e.g., Hovikoski et al., 2010; Hoorn et al., 2010; Boonstra et al., 2015). Yet the sedimentary structures and trace fossils proposed as marine are not uniquely associated with tidal systems (e.g., Westaway, 2006; Latrubesse et al., 2010). Constraining the nature and timing of the Amazon sedimentary environment with new drill cores across the basin is important, because many of these inadequately constrained aspects of the geological evolution of the Andes and Amazon have been invoked in biogeographic and phylogeographic models as barriers to gene flow and drivers of species diversification.
Controversy also surrounds the role of climate in driving neotropical
speciation. Some argue that the majority of present-day species originated
prior to the Pleistocene (Hoorn et al., 2010) and that species origination
rates were largely independent of climate, thus shaped primarily by
geological agents of vicariance, including uplift, marine incursions,
mega-wetlands, riverine barriers, and arches. For example, Ribas et al. (2011) documented phylogenetic patterns in the flightless birds,
the trumpeters (Aves
Seismic reflection profile from the Acre Basin (location of line shown in Fig. 1). The proposed drill hole location (AC) and previous drill hole location (2JMST1AC) are shown.
What is the history of plant diversity across the Amazon basin? Is the
Amazon a “museum”, steadily accumulating diversity through time? Or does
diversity co-vary with global temperature, perhaps as a result of areal
expansion of the tropics? How does diversity respond to specific
environmental drivers, such as Andean uplift? Are there any clear extinction
events throughout the Amazon forest? What is the sequence of turnover of
dominant plant families and genera across the basin? When did
Andean-centered plant taxa expand across the basin? What was the nature of
biotic change in the Amazon region across the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary
(e.g., de la Parra, 2009)? Contemporary What is the history of tropical South American climate from the Late
Cretaceous to today? Does the Cenozoic thermal history of the Amazon region
mirror the global history that we deduce from the deep-sea oxygen isotopic
record (Zachos et al., 2001)? Were thermal optima relatively wet or dry
periods? The Held and Soden (2006) model predicts a wetter Amazon in past
thermal maxima and a drier Amazon in past cold periods. Was this in fact the
case? Or did an east–west equatorial precipitation dipole persist
throughout the whole Cenozoic as has been reconstructed from late Quaternary
speleothems (Cheng et al., 2013)? Did the progressive widening of the
Atlantic Ocean and the developing east–west equatorial Pacific zonal sea
surface temperature gradient during the Cenozoic imprint themselves on the hydrologic record of
the Amazon? Is there any evidence for increasing dryness during the Cenozoic
as has been reconstructed for other tropical localities (e.g., Sepulchre et
al., 2006)? What is the history of Andean uplift and erosion as recorded in Andean
foreland basins? The Acre foreland basin is ideal for this purpose, because
it is sufficiently proximal to the Andes to receive detrital input, yet
sufficiently distal from the Andes to have a relatively slow and continuous
rate of accumulation of finer-grained sediment most amenable to
paleoecological study. We expect Andean provenance to be well recorded in
both the Acre and the Solimões basins. Specifically we will test the
alternative hypotheses (1) that the portion of the Andes located to the west
of this region was high-standing and provided sediment to the Acre Basin
throughout the entire Cenozoic, or (2) that the Andes only underwent
significant uplift in the Late Miocene. When did west-to-east hydrologic continuity develop between the Amazon
basin and the equatorial Atlantic? Did the Purus Arch act as an ancient
hydrologic divide between eastward and westward drainage? Did the Gurupá
Arch form the ultimate divide between the western Amazon drainages and the
Atlantic Ocean? Did these structural arches serve as geographic barriers as
posited by Patton et al. (2000)? Did the main-stem Amazon or its major
tributaries present barriers to taxa inhabiting opposite banks of the rivers
(e.g., Ribas et al., 2011)? Can we date the origins of the through-flowing
Amazon, providing better constraints for molecular dating of taxonomic
divergence (Baker et al., 2014)?
Seismic reflection profile from the Solimões Basin (location of line shown in Fig. 1). Here, the Alter do Chão Formation is illustrated to be Cenozoic (Caputo, 2011), not Cretaceous, as previously believed. Multiple diabase sills and interbedded sediments unconformably underlie Cenozoic sediments in this region. The proposed (SB) drill hole will encounter the same stratigraphic column as shown in the seismic line, but is located more accessibly on the Rio Juruá.
The thickest volumes of the entire Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP, Marzoli et al., 1999) are preserved in the sedimentary basins of the Amazon. Workshop participant, Andrea Marzoli, discussed the exciting potential for drilling into this key stratigraphic unit to uncover its volume, origins, and timing of formation. CAMP magmatism caused rapid global perturbations through the emission of volcanic gases and was associated with the break-up of Pangaea, the opening of the Atlantic Ocean, and the mass extinction event at the Triassic–Jurassic boundary (Marzoli et al., 2004; Schoene et al., 2010; Ruhl et al., 2011). Intruded magmas occur within the Paleozoic sedimentary sequences of the Amazon and Solimões basins (Fig. 3) and reach up to a kilometer in thickness and can be traced over distances of nearly 1000 km. Geochemical and geochronological analysis of these extensive units can be used to test hypotheses regarding the origins of CAMP and its global impacts.
The outcropping sedimentary formations of the Amazon basin also host one of the largest aquifers in the world (Wahnfried and Soares, 2012). Workshop participant, Ingo Wahnfried, argued that the drilling of the Cenozoic and older sediments of the Amazon region will provide important constraints on the volume, age, geochemistry, flow rates, and residence time of groundwater units and the connectivity of surficial and shallow units with deeper transmissive layers. The aquifers are important conduits between surface and the subsurface environments, and access to aquifers may also provide important insights into biogeochemical processes, as well as the deep biosphere and the diversity of Amazonian subsurface microbial communities.
We have reviewed seismic reflection and well log data from all four of the continental Brazilian Amazon basins, and we have identified five continental drilling sites, all easily accessible, located on pre-existing seismic lines, and located near pre-existing drill holes with available well log and lithologic data. We are working with the Brazilian drilling company Geosol to develop a detailed proposal for carrying out the drilling operations, employing either a Boart Longyear LF or Atlas Copco CT 20 drill rig. Both have capabilities to drill to more than 1500 m with HQ diameter cores or nearly 2500 m with N diameter cores. The drill sites will all be located on the margins of large navigable rivers (the Juruá, the Amazon, the Straits of Breves), allowing transport of equipment and personnel by barge. Drilling will involve offloading the drilling vehicle at a port or temporary landing and installation on a pre-prepared drilling pad. All personnel will be housed in a hotel boat adjacent to the drill site. All drilling will be undertaken with blow-out prevention due to the possibility of encountering shallow gas accumulations in this region. Drilling muds will be chosen with consideration to minimizing contamination for organic geochemistry while maximizing core recovery and drilling rate.
In the westernmost Acre Basin, thick Cenozoic foreland basin sequences will require our deepest drilling, perhaps 2 km total depth, in order to reach the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary (Fig. 2). In the Solimões Basin site (Fig. 3), a thinner sequence of the Mio-Pliocene Solimões Formation conformably overlies the Paleocene-to-Miocene-age (Caputo, 2011) Alter do Chão Formation that, in turn, unconformably overlies the “Penatecaua” diabase sills. In this site, we aim to recover a sequence of 750 m of Cenozoic sediments overlying a complete sequence (ca. 900 m total) of four diabase sills and interbedded sediments.
On the eastern flank of the Purus Arch, we will drill a site in the western
Amazon basin where the Cenozoic sequence is substantially thinner than in
the Solimões Basin. A second Amazon site will be located in the far
eastern part of the basin on the western flank of the Gurupá Arch, where
Cenozoic sediments are appreciably thicker than farther west. This latter
site will be paired with a site on the eastern flank of the Gurupá Arch
in the northwestern part of the Marajó Basin, where the Cenozoic
sequence is
Dating the Cenozoic, mostly fluvial, sediments of the Amazon has been challenging. We expect this to be undertaken by a combination of paleomagnetic stratigraphy, palynostratigraphy, U–Pb geochronology, and marine biostratigraphy in the eastern sites proximal to the Atlantic Ocean. Key measurements to be undertaken on all drill cores are pollen identification and quantification to determine biodiversity and its change through time (Jaramillo et al., 2006, 2010); organic geochemical measurements that record past climate, yet are relatively insensitive to diagenetic alteration (Freeman and Pancost, 2014); microfossils and geochemical measurements on carbonate units that can differentiate between fresh, brackish, and marine environments (Gross et al., 2011, 2013); and provenance studies using U–Pb or Nd–Sm or other measurements that will allow dating of connectivity of basins across the continent (Mapes, 2009).
P. A. Baker, S. C. Fritz, and C. G. Silva wrote the manuscript, and Rigsby contributed to the section on site selection. Other co-authors attended the workshop and contributed to the discussion of the ideas and plans presented here.
We thank U. Harms and ICDP for funding and facilitating the workshop that motivated this article and Renato de Franca and colleagues for hosting the workshop at INPA. Supported by NSF (FESD) #1338694 to P. A. Baker, S. C. Fritz, and colleagues. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the US Government. Edited by: T. Wiersberg Reviewed by: T. Johnson and one anonymous referee