Florida Museum director Douglas Jones
Florida Museum researchers Douglas Jones (left) and Bruce MacFadden examine fossils and sediment layers in the Gaillard Cut of the Panama Canal to piece together a timeline of the formation of the Isthmus of Panama. Geologic and chemical dating was used to estimate that Central America joined South America about 4 million years ago.

Photo by Michael X. Kirby

Contrary to previous evidence, a new Florida Museum of Natural History study shows the Isthmus of Panama was most likely formed by the Central American Peninsula colliding slowly with the South American continent through tectonic plate movement over millions of years.

The study, co-authored by Florida Museum researchers Michael Kirby, Douglas Jones and Bruce MacFadden, is published in the July 30, 2008, issue of PLoS ONE, the online journal of the Public Library of Science. The study uses geologic, chemical and biologic methods to date rocks and fossils found in sides of the Gaillard Cut of the Panama Canal. The results show that instead of being formed by rising and subsiding ocean levels or existing as a string of islands as scientists previously believed, the Isthmus of Panama was first a peninsula of southern Central America before the underlying tectonic plates merged it with South America 4 million years ago.

“Scientists knew Panama was a North American peninsula, possibly as early as 19 million years ago because fossils that are closely related to North American land mammals, such as rhinos, horses, peccaries and dogs have been found in the Panama Canal during ongoing maintenance,” said Kirby, lead author of the study. “But we were not certain when this peninsula first formed and how long it may have existed.”

fossilized leaf
This fossilized dicot leaf was found near the Panama Canal’s Centennial Bridge in 2007.

Photo by Fabiany Herrera

The canal’s maintenance also exposes sediment layers and marine animal fossils, as well as strata of rocks and clay specific to numerous environments, including lagoon, delta, swamp, woodland and dry tropical forest.

Previous studies placed marine sediment as the youngest layers, suggesting the peninsula was submerged before finally joining with South America. The current study revises the time order of strata, however, and concludes that the Panamanian peninsula joined with South America roughly 4 million years ago.

“Deep-sea deposits in one sediment layer suggest a short-lived strait may have existed across the Panama Canal Basin between 21 and 20 million years ago,” said Jones, director of the Florida Museum of Natural History. “However, these short-lived straits probably had little impact on the long-term evolution of Central America’s flora and fauna.”

coconut fossil
This fossil coconut fruit from the Miocene Epoch, about 17 million years ago, was found near the Panama Canal’s Centennial Bridge.

Photo by Bruce MacFadden

Kirby explained that because of numerous geologic faults resulting from tectonic plate movement that continues today, there is no area in Panama that allows a full view of the strata making up the land.

“We realized there was a problem with our previous understanding of the stratigraphy, or layering of sediments, in Panama,” Kirby said.

The authors used alternative methods such as strontium isotope dating of fossils and re-analysis of vertebrate fossils to better determine the geologic sequence of the Panama Canal.

“There’s always missing information, like pages out of a book, when it comes to figuring out which layers came first and which were formed later,” Kirby added.

Anthony Coates, a staff scientist emeritus at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama who has extensively studied the geological history of the rise of the Central American isthmus, said the study brings together a diverse array of geologic evidence that convincingly suggests Central America was a peninsula and not a group of islands.

Alex Hastings and Fabiany Herrera dig in Panama
Florida Museum graduate students Alex Hastings (standing) and Fabiany Herrera (foreground) collect fossils from the Miocene-age Cucaracha Formation (about 17 million years old), along the Gaillard Cut on the Panama Canal in 2007. The Gaillard Cut is a manmade valley that cuts through the continental divide. Centennial Bridge (Puente Centenario) can be seen in the background.

Florida Museum photo by Bruce MacFadden

“They have made an important contribution to the land-based geologic evidence of the plate tectonic history of the formation of the Isthmus,” said Coates, who did not participate in the study. “Their results have important consequences for the nature of the global change engendered by the rise and closure of the isthmus.”

One of the major effects of the formation of the Isthmus of Panama was the intensification of the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic Ocean. While the area that is now Panama was still a peninsula, ocean currents moving north along the north coast of South America spilled over to the Pacific Ocean through the wide Central American Seaway, also called the Atrato Seaway. As tectonic plate movement joined the peninsula with South America to form the present-day Isthmus of Panama, equatorial ocean currents between the Atlantic and Pacific were cut off, forcing water northward into the Gulf Stream current.

“The strengthened Gulf Stream, in turn, delivered enough moisture to allow the formation of glaciers across North America,” Kirby said.


The complete text of the study is available on the publication’s Web site, www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0002791.

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