Coquimbo Formation is a Miocene to Middle Pleistocene sedimentary formation located in Coquimbo Region in Norte Chico, Chile. The lowermost unit belongs to the lower Miocene, with the third-deepest unit dated at 11.9 ± 1.0 Ma. The uppermost unit of the formation is estimated at 1.2 Ma. In the area of Tongoy, the Coquimbo Formation was deposited in an ancient bay that was formed in a graben or half-graben, with a normal fault dipping east. Sea level changes during the Holocene have caused erosion to cut several marine terraces into the formation.
Marine terrace exposing strata of the Coquimbo Formation, at Caleta Hornos
Cerro Ballena is a fossiliferous 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.
Adult and juvenile balaenopterid whale mass mortality nicknamed "La Familia"
Stratigraphic and sedimentological diagram from Cerro Ballena
Multiple balaenopterid whale specimen occurrences from Cerro Ballena which are thought to have died due to toxic algae
Ichnotaxa from Cerro Ballena, including traces attributed to algae structures and crab feeding