Cerro Ballena (meaning "Whale Hill") is a locality of the Bahía Inglesa Formation, located in the Atacama Desert along the Pan-American Highway a few kilometers north of the port of Caldera, Chile. It has been dated back to the Late Miocene epoch, during the Neogene period. The locality was first noted in 1965 during military work and fully excavated and studied between 2011 and 2012, and is protected by law since the latter year.
Cerro Ballena is extremely abundant in cetacean fossil skeletons, including over 40 individuals of adult and juvenile ages. This high concentration of cetacean skeletons has made Cerro Ballena well known, now considered a national treasure of Chile. Besides cetaceans the site does also contains fossils of (seals), sailfish, , swordfish, aquatic sloths (not a group as such, but rather the genus Thalassocnus) and invertebrate .
The unusual concentration of cetacean remains and other marine vertebrates is explained to have occurred due to poisoning by secreted by algae (events also known as harmful algal bloom). Geological and paleontological evidence indicates that high levels of iron in the sea saturated the growth of algae. Cetaceans and other vertebrates became poisoned, and their carcasses then floated towards the coastline, where they were later transported by strong waves into a flattened berm/shore, and finally becoming buried. This sequence of events happened four times during the deposition of sediments at Cerro Ballena.
Paleontologist and curator of the Paleontological Museum of Caldera (MPC), Mario Suárez Palacios, noted the importance and impact of the situation and together with the director of Atacama Regional Museum requested a meeting with the at-the-time governor of Atacama. Upon this meeting studies and measures to stop work progress at the locality were performed in coordination with the Ministry of Public Works, which allowed the National Monuments Council (CMN) of Chile to intervene and protect the fossils. Although the fossil remains were secured by laws and ready to get unearthed, the unprecedented high concentration of nearly complete whale skeletons (over 30 individuals) difficulted the speed and efficiency of paleontological research, and by extent halted the progress on the subway expansion.
Suárez with his team became aware of this and reached out to other institutions for support, such as the Chilean National Museum of Natural History (located in Santiago) and the Smithsonian Institution of United States. As such, Cerro Ballena began to become very noticeable in both national and global contexts, and numerous institutions from Chile joined efforts to drive progress at the locality excavation. As a whole, excavation work was carried out between 2010 and 2012, discovering an extremely abundant concentration of whale fossils, proclaiming Cerro Ballena as the largest whale fossil site in Chile. With authorization of the CMN, documentation and agreements with the Smithsonian Institution were conducted so skeletons could be prepared in their museums, further speeding up the research at Cerro Ballena. Supplemental Material
As a fruitful result of the extensive excavation works and in-field studies by researchers over the years, collected geological and paleontological data from the site was finally published in 2014, in a publication led by North American paleontologist Nicholas D. Pyenson and colleagues from Chie. The published research revealed that not only whale fossils were abundant at Cerro Ballena, but also fish, seals, ground sloths, and trace fossils, as well as giving insight into the taphonomic history of the fossil preservation at the locality.
Fossil taxa like Thalassocnus natans and Carcharodon are reported from Cerro Ballena, which are also known to occur in the Miocene-Pliocene Pisco Formation of Peru, mostly similar to Cerro Ballena in sedimentation. Specifically, these taxa are correlated with El Jahuay and Montemar Horizon localities of the Peruvian Sacaco Basin, thus placing the age of Cerro Ballena between 9.03 million and 6.45 million years old (roughly Late Miocene). Because of the geology of Cerro Ballena, it has been assigned its own member, the Cerro Ballena Member. In this context, it is suggested that this member is somewhat equivalent in age to La Higuera and Mina Fosforita members of the Bahía Inglesa Formation, though its depositional environment is mostly similar to that of the Punta Totoral Member. As such, Cerro Ballena is considered to be slightly older than La Higuera Member, around 8.4 million years.
At Cerro Ballena, several iron-stained domal structures can be found in the strata, which are attributed to algae growth traces. Given that the reported algae domal structures are rich in iron oxide replacement, it is concluded that a high concentration of iron was present at the mass-mortality events, which by extent saturated the growth of algae in the sea environment. Toxins would have been later consumed by marine vertebrates of this region. The close proximity of both juvenile-adult cetacean and other vertebrates (thus, multispecific) fossils strongly reinforces the interpretation that assemblages died from a common cause.
Floating vertebrate corpses located in the shoreline were later transported to the supratidal flat by high-energy storm waves, and protected from other sea waves by surrounding geological barriers and basement rocks. The supratidal flat allowed carcasses to decay in a paleoenvironment free from scavengers and climatic hazards. Fine grained sediments eventually buried the skeletons. As reflected by four fossil-bearing levels at Cerro Ballena, these HABs and mass-mortality events repeated at least in four rapid instances, thus preserving an exceptional concentration of marine vertebrate fossils.
Because of the relative articulation and completeness of cetacean skeletons compared to other vertebrates, it is clear that scavengers were unable to fully target floating whale carcasses. This could be explained by differences in size between carcasses or temporal delay during scavenging which allowed further abrasion and disarticulation of skeletal remains. Scavengers that could dismember skeletons were further limited once these arrived in the supraridal flat, whose surroundings were already becoming desertic. It is also possible that predatory fish (such as sharks or sailfishes) were additional victims of toxic algae due to the ingestion of contaminated carcasses. Nevertheless, small feeding traces attributed to crabs have been reported from the skull of at least one whale skeleton.
Geology and age
Depositional environment
Taphonomy
Paleobiota of Cerro Ballena
Algae
Algae indet. Indeterminate "Iron-stained algae growth traces." Growth trace fossil.
Fish
Carcharodon C. hastalis "Teeth." A lamnid shark. Istiophoridae indet. Indeterminate "Nearly complete vertebra and fragmentary rostrum." A billfish. Xiphiidae indet. Indeterminate "Partial vertebra." A billfish.
Invertebrates
Brachyura indet. Indeterminate "Feeding traces on whale skulls." Crab feeding traces. Ophiomorpha Indeterminate "Multiple burrows." Invertebrate trace fossil. Psilonichnus Indeterminate "Several unorganized traces." An invertebrate supratidal trace fossil. Skolithos-like Indeterminate "Elongated vertical tubes." Invertebrate trace fossil. Thalassinoides Indeterminate "Web-like traces." Invertebrate trace fossil.
Mammals
Cetaceans
Balaenopteridae indet. Indeterminate "Multiple partial to nearly complete skeletons, including juveniles and adults." A baleen whale. Delphinoidea indet. Indeterminate "Partial skeleton." A toothed whale. Odobenocetops Indeterminate "Fragmentary skull and skeleton, including tusks." A toothed whale. Physeteroidea indet. Indeterminate "Teeth and right periotic." A toothed whale.
Seals
Acrophoca Indeterminate "Scapula and femur." An earless seal. Australophoca A. changorum "Left humerus." An earless seal.
Sloths
Thalassocnus T. natans "Partial lower jaw and femur." A nothrotheriid ground sloth.
See also
External links
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Cerro Ballena fieldwork imagery at Wayback Machine archive
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