Abstract
Detailed geologic mapping of the Fondo Negro-Sierra de Martin Garcia
region of the Southwestern Dominican Republic establishes that this area
is part of a broad and diffuse Northern Caribbean plate boundary zone (PBZ).
Faulting in the study area is predominantly left lateral strike-slip, with
secondary compression (thrusting) causing both substantial, and rapid,
uplift of the region. Folding associated with the wrench faulting affects
rocks of all ages in the field area from Paleocene limestones to Quaternary
alluvial fans.
New stratigraphic designations are proposed for mappable litho-units
in the area, and these are correlated with Hispaniola stratigraphy in general
based on biostratigraphic age determinations. Thus a new formation name,
the Fondo Negro Formation is proposed for a thick (2650 m. exposed) predominately
calcareous siltstone, marl and sandstone sequence which is exposed between
the village of Fondo Negro and the Sierra de Martin Garcia where it lies
in tectonic contact with Paleocene to early Miocene carbonates. The Fondo
Negro Formation contains microfauna belonging to the Tortonian and Messinian
intervals. The lowest exposed section of the Fondo Negro Formation contains
distinctive, ridge forming, sandy limestones and this unit is described
as the Gajo Largo member. The 400m. of predominantly grey calcareous shales
apparently conformably overlying the Fondo Negro Formation are redefined
as the Bao Formation, also of Messinian age, and conformably above that
the Pliocene, Arroyo Blanco Formation, also more specifically defined than
previous studies. The Arroyo Blanco Formation comprises sandy marls, and
resedimented carbonate shelf debris, as well as coarse sandstones and conglomerates.
In the east it is approximately 100m thick, and it varies as a facies transition
into evaporites in the northwest of the field area. The evaporite faeies,
including massive pure gypsum beds are probably thicker than the facies
in the east.
The carbonates of the Sierra de Martin Garcia were not mapped in detail,
but paleontological determinations for samples collected indicate a broader
age range for the carbonates than suggested on existing maps (Blesch, 1967),
from Paleocene to Early Miocene.
In addition to the primary field mapping, reconnaissance studies and
paleontological analysis of samples from the Tavera Basin suggest that
it is the earliest basin yet identified related to the initiation of the
northern Caribbean PBZ. That is that this basin can be related to strike-slip
faulting in probably early Oligocene times and this represents movement
along the Cayman Trough.
An interpretive cross-section across Hispaniola is presented which
suggests that present strike-slip activity is greatest in the Cibao Valley,
the Enriquillo Valley and in the northern, offshore areas of Hispaniola,
and that the Island is cut by a great number of splay faults. The mountain
ranges, the Sierra de Neiba and the Sierra de Bahoruco are compressional
structures related to bends in the strike-slip fault system. An attempt
is made to integrate this in the perspective of the Cainozoic evolution
of the Greater Antilles.
Cooper, J.C., 1983. Geology of the Fondo Negro region, Dominican Republic.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany. 145pp.,
+xiv; 4 folded plates (maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1983 C66
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological
Sciences Program, University at Albany