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Featured researches published by C. Di Celma.


Journal of the Geological Society | 2011

Submarine slope degradation and aggradation and the stratigraphic evolution of channel–levee systems

David M. Hodgson; C. Di Celma; Rufus L. Brunt; Stephen S. Flint

Abstract: Two seismic-scale submarine channel–levee systems exposed in the Karoo Basin, South Africa provide insights into slope conduit evolution. Component channel fills in a levee-confined channel system (Unit C) and an entrenched channel system (Unit D) follow common stacking patterns; initial horizontal stacking (lateral migration) is followed by vertical stacking (aggradation). This architecture is a response to an equilibrium profile shift from low accommodation (slope degradation, composite erosion surface formation, external levee development, sediment bypass) through at-grade conditions (horizontal stacking and widening) to high accommodation (slope aggradation, vertical stacking, internal levee development). This architecture is likely common to other channel–levee systems. Supplementary material: A detailed correlation panel (presented schematically in Figure 2) is available at www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18456.


Journal of Maps | 2016

Stratigraphic framework of the late Miocene to Pliocene Pisco Formation at Cerro Colorado (Ica Desert, Peru)

C. Di Celma; Elisa Malinverno; Karen Gariboldi; Anna Gioncada; Andrea Rustichelli; Pietro Paolo Pierantoni; Walter Landini; Giulia Bosio; Chiara Tinelli; Giovanni Bianucci

This paper describes a ∼200 m-thick section of the Pisco Formation exposed at Cerro Colorado, an important fossiliferous site in the Ica desert. In order to properly place the fauna in its correct relative position, this study establishes the stratigraphic framework within which the different fossil-bearing intervals of this site can be compared and may prove invaluable in future high-resolution studies on the faunal change. Most of the Pisco Formation deposits exposed at Cerro Colorado consist of gently dipping fine-grained sandstones, diatomaceous siltstones and diatomites with minor ash layers and dolomites deposited within nearshore and offshore settings. To facilitate detailed stratigraphic correlations within the Pisco strata for a 30 km2 area, eight marker beds have been defined and large-scale (1:10,000 scale) geological mapping conducted to determine fault positions, styles and offsets. The geological map shows that there are two important angular unconformities in the study area. The first one is the interformational basal unconformity of the Pisco Formation against folded, faulted, and planated Oligo-Miocene rocks of the Chilcatay Formation. The second is a low-angle intraformational erosional discontinuity of up to 4° angular discordance that allows the subdivision of the Pisco stratigraphy exposed in the study area into two informal allomembers. Dating of the exposed succession by diatom biostratigraphy suggests that the age of the lower allomember is late Miocene, whereas the upper allomember is late Miocene or younger.


Journal of Maps | 2016

Stratigraphic framework of the late Miocene Pisco Formation at Cerro Los Quesos (Ica Desert, Peru)

C. Di Celma; Elisa Malinverno; Gino Cantalamessa; Anna Gioncada; Giulia Bosio; Igor M. Villa; Karen Gariboldi; Andrea Rustichelli; Pietro Paolo Pierantoni; Walter Landini; Chiara Tinelli; Alberto Collareta; Giovanni Bianucci

The enormous concentration of marine vertebrates documented within the Pisco Formation is unique for Peru and South America and places this unit among the prime fossil Lagerstätten for Miocene to Pliocene marine mammals worldwide. In order to provide a robust stratigraphic framework for the fossil-bearing locality of Cerro Los Quesos, this study presents a 1:10,000 scale geological map covering an area of about 21 km2, a detailed measured section spanning 290 m of strata, and a refined chronostratigraphy for the studied succession well constrained by diatom biostratigraphy and high-resolution 40Ar/39Ar isotopic dating of three interbedded ash layers. Within the apparently monotonous, diatomite-dominated sedimentary section, the Pisco Formation has been subdivided into six local members, with stratigraphic control over the different outcrops facilitated by the establishment of a detailed marker bed stratigraphy based on 15 readily distinguishable sediment layers of different nature.


Journal of Systematic Palaeontology | 2018

A new odontocete (toothed cetacean) from the Early Miocene of Peru expands the morphological disparity of extinct heterodont dolphins

Olivier Lambert; C. de Muizon; Elisa Malinverno; C. Di Celma; Mario Urbina; Giovanni Bianucci

A key step in the evolutionary history of Odontoceti (echolocating toothed cetaceans) is the transition from the ancestral heterodont condition – characterized by the presence of double-rooted cheek teeth bearing accessory denticles – to the homodont dentition displayed by most extant odontocete species. During the last few decades, new finds and the reassessment of specimens in collections revealed an increased morphological disparity amongst the Oligo–Miocene heterodont odontocetes. Based on a partly articulated skeleton from late Early Miocene (Burdigalian, 18.8–18.0 Ma) beds of the Chilcatay Formation (Pisco Basin, Peru), we describe a new genus and species of heterodont odontocete, Inticetus vertizi, in the new family Inticetidae. This large dolphin is characterized by, amongst other things, a long and robust rostrum bearing at least 18 teeth per quadrant; the absence of procumbent anterior teeth; many large, broad-based accessory denticles in double-rooted posterior cheek teeth; a reduced ornament of dental crowns; the styliform process of the jugal being markedly robust; a large fovea epitubaria on the periotic, with a correspondingly voluminous accessory ossicle of the tympanic bulla; and a shortened tuberculum of the malleus. Phylogenetic analyses (with and without molecular constraint; with and without down-weighting of homoplastic characters) yielded contrasting results, with Inticetus falling either as a stem Odontoceti or as an early branching member of a large Platanistoidea clade. With its large size, robust rostrum and unusual dental morphology, and the absence of conspicuous tooth wear, Inticetus increases the morphological and ecological disparity of Late Oligocene–Early Miocene heterodont odontocetes. Finally, this new taxon calls for caution when attempting to identify isolated cetacean cheek teeth, even at the suborder level. http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5B306B49-EB1B-42F9-B755-B0B05B4F938F


Journal of the Geological Society | 2012

Off-shelf sedimentary record of recurring global sea-level changes during the Plio-Pleistocene: evidence from the cyclic fills of exhumed slope systems in central Italy

C. Di Celma; Gino Cantalamessa

The markedly cyclic sedimentary successions of four late Pliocene to early Pleistocene slope turbidite systems exposed in eastern central Italy have been resolved into 31 high-frequency sequences. Chronological constraints from biostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy indicate that these successions form a composite, partially overlapping stratigraphic record and sequence-bounding surfaces can be convincingly correlated with glacial oxygen isotope stages G2–60 (c. 2.65–1.7 Ma) inclusive. The studied successions, therefore, preserve an extraordinary and legible record of recurring, orbitally dictated glacio-eustatic sea-level fluctuations and provide an unprecedented opportunity to examine the deep-water sedimentary response to such high-frequency changes from an outcrop perspective. Supplementary material: Sedimentological attributes of lithofacies identified in the studied successions are available at www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18549.


Journal of Maps | 2018

Facies analysis, stratigraphy and marine vertebrate assemblage of the lower Miocene Chilcatay Formation at Ullujaya (Pisco basin, Peru)

C. Di Celma; Elisa Malinverno; Alberto Collareta; Giulia Bosio; Karen Gariboldi; Olivier Lambert; Walter Landini; Pietro Paolo Pierantoni; Anna Gioncada; Igor M. Villa; G. Coletti; C. de Muizon; Mario Urbina; Giovanni Bianucci

ABSTRACT This paper is the first integrated account of the sedimentology, stratigraphy, and vertebrate paleontology for the marine strata of the Chilcatay Formation exposed at Ullujaya, Pisco basin (southern Peru). An allostratigraphic framework for the investigated strata was established using geological mapping (1:4000 scale) and conventional sedimentary facies analysis and resulted in recognition of two unconformity-bounded allomembers (designated Ct1 and Ct2 in ascending order). The chronostratigraphic framework is well constrained by integration of micropaleontological data and isotope geochronology and indicates deposition during the early Miocene. The marine vertebrate fossil assemblage is largely dominated by cetaceans (odontocetes), whereas isolated teeth and spines indicate a well-diversified elasmobranch assemblage. Our field surveys, conducted to evaluate the paleontological sensitivity of the investigated strata, indicate that vertebrate remains only came from a rather restricted stratigraphic interval of the Ct1 allomember and reveal the high potential for these sediments to yield abundant and scientifically significant fossil assemblages.


Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2011

Depositional architecture and sequence stratigraphy of the Karoo basin floor to shelf edge succession, Laingsburg depocentre, South Africa

Stephen S. Flint; David M. Hodgson; A.R. Sprague; Rufus L. Brunt; W.C. Van der Merwe; Jorge J.P. Figueiredo; Amandine Prélat; D. Box; C. Di Celma; John P. Kavanagh


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2006

Palaeoecology and taphonomy of an extraordinary whale barnacle accumulation from the Plio-Pleistocene of Ecuador

Giovanni Bianucci; C. Di Celma; Walter Landini; J. Buckeridge


Journal of South American Earth Sciences | 2018

Insights into the diagenetic environment of fossil marine vertebrates of the Pisco Formation (late Miocene, Peru) from mineralogical and Sr-isotope data

Anna Gioncada; R. Petrini; Giulia Bosio; Karen Gariboldi; Alberto Collareta; Elisa Malinverno; Elena Bonaccorsi; C. Di Celma; M. Pasero; Mario Urbina; Giovanni Bianucci


Bollettino Della Societa Paleontologica Italiana | 2009

Shell structure, taphonomy and mode of life of a Pleistocene ostreid from Ecuador

Luca Ragaini; C. Di Celma

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G. Valleri

University of Florence

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Mario Urbina

National University of San Marcos

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