Fossil Encope (Echinoidea) from the Pacific coast of southern Mexico

  • J. Wyatt Durham Department of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, U.S.A.
Keywords: Cenozoic, fossil echinoid, Pacific, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico

Abstract

The only Cenozoic fossil echinoid recorded from the Pacific coast to mainland Mexico, between the Guatemalan border and Puerto Vallarta, at the entrance to the Gulf of California, is Encope micropora L. Agassiz (Palmer and Hertlein, 1936, p. 66) from the Pleistocene Colotepec Formation of the southern coast of Oaxaca (Caso, 1951, 1961; Buitrón, 1978). Recently, several Cenozoic marine basins have been discovered along the Pacific Coast (Durham et al., 1981). In two of these basins, one near La Mira, Michoacán, and the other near Santa Cruz, Oaxaca, fossil keyhold urchins (genus Encope) were found.

Near La Mira, the echinoid occurs in the lower part of the marine beds cropping out around the Ferrotepec iron mines (Sicartsa Mining Company). These beds are of late early to early middle Miocene age and rest unconformably on the ore bearing strata of pre-Cenozoic age (Durham et al., 1981). Download full text.

Published
2019-02-22
Section
Regular Papers