
The current blog entry is below, to read previous entries, go to: 2021 Archive, 2022 Archive, 2023 Archive, 2024 Archive, 2025 Archive, or 2026 Archive.
This week, before going on to discuss the geology and mineral resources of Panama, we will first look at some news items I thought were interesting.
If you enjoy my blogs, bookmark the site and check on Mondays rather than relying on social media postings which can get lost in the shuffle. For my news items, I try to stick to open access papers.
If anyone has comments on any of my postings, please leave a comment on the Linkedin page for the posting or email me at raymondreichelt@gmail.com.

Oil prices up to April
20, 2026
Credit:
Oilprice.com

Marine Traffic in
Strait of Hormuz April 20
Credit:
marinetraffic.com
Strait of Hormuz Faces Full Shutdown as Iran Escalates Standoff.
Israel, Lebanon agree to ten-day ceasefire, Netanyahu confirms.
Opinions on the war:
Bessent urges World Bank to shift funding towards critical minerals.
Exclusive: Pentagon ramps up planning for possible military ops in Cuba.
Canada urgently needs a civilian defence strategy – before the next crisis forces one.
Irish Patriots Are Fighting Back, see also the New Republican Movement.
Related to today’s posting: Panama Canal Shows Cold War Playing Out in Slow Motion.
Light calcium isotope anomaly in the Pitcairn mantle plume: a signal of pyroxenite melting.
Late Miocene Colorado River arrival in the Bidahochi basin supports spillover origin of Grand Canyon; Live Science summary here.
New mineral: Tantalaeschynite-(Ce), a new Ta- dominant member of aeschynite- group from Ta-enriched pegmatite at Huangshan, South China.
Fluvial geology: Quantitative analysis of channel characteristics of distributive fluvial systems.
Bicharracosaurus dionidei, gen. et sp. nov., a new macronarian (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) from the Late Jurassic Cañadón Calcáreo Formation of Argentina and the problematic early evolution of macronarians; Phys.org summary here.
A short-snouted ‘sphenosuchian’ with unusual feeding anatomy demonstrates that ecological specialization occurred early in crocodylomorph evolution; Phys.org summary here.
A new taxon of saurischian dinosaur from the Coelophysis Quarry of New Mexico, USA (Triassic: latest Norian or Rhaetian) highlights herrerasaurian diversity in the latest Triassic; ScienceDaily summary here.
The first Victorian record of Owen’s Giant Echidna Megalibgwilia owenii from Buchan Caves in East Gippsland, Australia; summary in The Conversation.
Stromatolites: A snapshot of an Ediacaran microbialite assemblage from the Byng Formation (Neoproterozoic Miette Group, Alberta, Canada).
Afghanistan’s mineral resources: a historical review of geological studies and discoveries.
Arsenic substitution and galvanic coupling in pyrite trigger uranium mineralization in sandstone.
Despite a diplomatic clash, the US is investing in an experimental South African rare earths project.
Copper price within sight of all-time high as Chinese smelters hit record activity.
China’s Nuclear Power Boom Is Accelerating Faster Than Expected.
Soaring tungsten prices add impetus to Vietnam mine sale effort.
U.S. natural gas exports to grow nearly 30% by 2027 as LNG facilities ramp up.
Fire Erupts At Major Australian Refinery, Amplifying Fuel Shock As "Green" Killed Refining Buffer; meanwhile: Australia’s petrol stations run dry as energy crisis turns existential.
Lots of recent papers on glaciers in The Cryosphere from the EGU.
Glacial Lake Agassiz: The lost inland sea that dwarfed the Great Lakes and reshaped North America.
Valuable minerals under Antarctica’s melting ice could mean a drilling-ban reversal.


United States Geological Survey (USGS) Volcano Observatories:
Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles: No longer in the dark: Shining a light on Yellowstone’s hydrothermal explosions.
Volcano Watch – Fountains and festivities: Kīlauea erupts episode 44 as Merrie Monarch begins.
Predicting explosive volcanic eruptions: Validating Thermodynamic Models of Arc-Magma Differentiation and Training Neural Networks for Rapid Thermodynamic Property Inference.
High-enthalpy Larderello geothermal system, Italy, powered by thousands of cubic kilometres of mid-crustal magma; Phys.org summary here.

80-Centimetre Tsunami After 7.4-Magnitude Earthquake Hits Northern Japan; Japan Meteorological Agency summary here.
Rapid Earthquake Magnitude Estimation for Local Early Warning Systems Using Seismogeodesy.
M5.7 earthquake rattles Nevada; USGS summary here.
A weakened diurnal weather constraint leads to longer burning hours in North America.
Characterizing changes in postfire debris-flow hazard as burned areas recover.
Free geology books can be downloaded from these sites:
OreZone Readers and Experts Telegram Channel; the Ore Zone channel also shows employment opportunities for geologists.
The Groundwater Projecthas many groundwater geology books for free downloadtogether with free online courses, listed here.
Free Groundwater Modeling Courses from the HydroGeoCenter.
From Western Australia: Carbonatite, lamprophyre and host rocks in the northern Aileron Province.
Brett Davis’ book on veins in a deforming rock mass: “The Veining Bible”; also at this site.
From the Mineralogical Society of America: Handbook of Mineralogy.
Systematic geochemical classification of felsic igneous rocks of the Yilgarn Craton.
From the Arizona Geological Survey: Geochemistry Diagram Generator v 1.0.
Online app: Australia’s full national topographic library at your fingertips.
May 7-8, 2026 , Core Conference 2026, Alberta Energy Regulator, Core Research Centre, 3545 Research Way NW (University Research Park) Calgary, Alberta
GAC-MAC 2026 St. John's NL, St. John's Convention Center, May 25-28, 2026.
September 30 - October 3, 2026 SEG 2026 Conference Salt Lake City, United States.
Paleoamerican Odyssey 2026, October 14-17, 2026, Santa Fe Convention Center, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
November 2-3, 2026 CCMEC 2026 Victoria Inn Hotel & Convention Centre, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Society of Petroleum Engineers Distinguished Lecturer Schedule.
The Geological Society: Events & Courses.
Upcoming Distinguished Geoscience Australia Lectures (DGALs).

Figure 1 – Panama
Credit:
Mapsland,
Creative
Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Licence
The Republic of Panama is a country of 4,404,108 people in Central America. The country has a total area of 74,177.3 square kilometres including the mainland and numerous offshore islands. Land borders include Costa Rica, to the west and Columbia, to the southeast. To the north is the Caribbean Sea and to the south is the Pacific Ocean; the two are linked by the Panama Canal, a strategic waterway discussed in this geopolitical news item (also linked above).
Panama is amoderately wealthy country with a per capita GDP (PPP) of $42,772 and a very high Human Development Index of 0.839.The economy of Panama is dominated by service industries in: commerce, especially banking; in transportation and shipping, i.e. the Panama Canal;tourism; and general trade. In 2024, the top exports of Panama were: passenger ships, cargo ships, and other sea vessels; bananas; refined petroleum; and packaged medications. The top destinations were United States, Costa Rica, Netherlands, Denmark, and Thailand. In 2024, the top imports of Panama were crude petroleum, passenger and cargo ships (for registration and re-export), refined petroleum, nitrogen heterocyclic compounds, and cars. The top origins were China, United States, Ecuador, Japan, and Colombia.
For more details on the country, check out the Wikipedia and Grokipedia articles on the country.

Figure 2 - Tectonic and
Geological Context of Panama
Credit:
Figure 1 in Redwood, 2020, CC
BY-NC-SA 4.0
Tectonically, Panama is located at the junction of Nazca, Cocos, Caribbean and South American plates. Within Panama the two major tectonic blocks are the Chorotega and the Choco blocks.
The Panamanian Isthmus is primarily a volcanic island arc formed by a fairly complex geological history. The major events of this history include:
The convergence between the oceanic Farallon and Caribbean Plates during Late Cretaceous-Paleogene;
Deformation of Panama by extension from the Eocene to the Miocene; and
The Middle Miocene collision of the Panama-Choco block with the South America Plate.

Figure 3 – Ages of
Volcanic Rocks in Panama
Credit:
Figure 4 in Redwood 2020, CC
BY-NC-SA 4.0
The oldest rocks in Panama are those of the Caribbean Large Igneous Province, ranging in age from 115 to 71 million years ago (Mya) (Aptian to Maastrichtian). These deposits are primarily oceanic basalts and also includes copper and gold deposits (more on those below).
Next younger 71 to 48 Mya are the Campanian to Early Eocene volcanic arc intrusive and extrusive deposits. These deposits range from tholeiitic to calc-alkaline basalts. These volcanic rocks also includes metallic mineral deposits.
Ranging in age from 66 to 17 Mya (Danian to Burdigalian) are the Ocean Island Basalts. As you might guess, these are also oceanic basalts.
Island arc deposits in Panama include: the Early Arc Deposits, 47 to 34 Mya (Middle to Late Eocene); and the Oligocene aged Middle Arc Deposits (31-18 Mya).
The youngest volcanic deposits are the Miocene aged Miocene Arc Deposits and the Adakite Volcanoes (5 - 0 Mya) that began erupting during the Pliocene.
Figure 4 links to an interactive geological map of Panama.

Figure 4 – Interactive
Geology Map of Panama
Credit:
Macrostrat, CC-BY-4.0
There are lots of good geology papers on Panama; for further reading start with:
Fowler, G. D. ,2015, Geology and Geochemistry of the Western Panamá Canal Basin Volcanic Arc Rocks, Thesis, http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2016SP_Fowler_fsu_0071N_12915
Redwood, S. D., 2020, The mineral deposits of Panama: Arc metallogenesis on the trailing edge of the Caribbean large igneous province, Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana 72(3):1-69, DOI:10.18268/BSGM2020v72n3a130220. (also in Research Gate)
Barat, Flore & de Lépinay, Bernard & Marc, Sosson & Müller, C., 2012, Geologic Evolution of the eastern Panama Isthmus from biostratigraphic, tectonic and geophysical data, Research Gate.
Montes, Camilo & Bayona, Germán & Cardona, Agustin & Buchs, David & Silva, C. & Polanco, Sara & Hoyos, Natalia & Ramirez, Diego & Jaramillo, Carlos & Valencia, Victor, 2012. Arc-Continent Collision and Orocline Formation: Closing of the Central American Seaway. Journal of Geophysical Research (Solid Earth). 117. 4105-. 10.1029/2011JB008959, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011JB008959
With all the volcanic rocks in Panama, you might not expect to find fossils. However, some 31 formations in Panama, ranging in age from the Eocene to the Holocene have yielded fossils. Here are a few examples.

Figure 5 – Nodipecten sp.
Credit:
Randolph
Femmer, public
domain
Found in the Oligocene Panama Formation, Nodipecten clydonus was a sea scallop. The fossils were found in tuffaceous sediments -conglomerates, sandstones, and shales made up of volcanic tuff – and described by W. P. Woodring in 1982.

Figure 6 - ParatocerasCredit: karkemish00-d5b9mtm, in Dinopedia, CC-BY-SA
Paratoceras was a genus of Artiodactyla, of the family Protoceratidae, that lived in North and Central America during the Early to Middle Miocene, 20.4 to 10.3 Mya. Paratoceras resembled deer, but were probably more closely related to chevrotains, so-called “mouse deer”. They had three horns, two on the top of the head and a third horn on the snout. In Panama, Paratoceras coatesi was found in the Cucaracha Formation.

Figure 7 - Purussaurus
Credit:
Nobu Tamura, Creative
Commons Attribution
3.0 Unported license
Purussaurus was a genus of giant caimans that lived in the Americas during the Miocene. Specimens of Purussaurushave been found in Argentina, Brazil, Panama, and Venezuela. In Panama, Purussaurus were found in the Culebra Formation.

Figure 8 - CormohipparionCredit: Bernor et al, 2018, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license
The Late Miocene Alajuela Formation of central Panama has yielded two examples of extinct horses: Cormohipparion and Dinohippus. Both genera were widespread in North and Central America.

Figure 9 –
Dinohippus
Credit:
Ghedoghedo,
Creative
Commons Attribution-Share
Alike 3.0 Unported license

Figure 10 – Pyruclia
sp.
Credit:
Shellnut,
Creative
Commons Attribution-Share
Alike 3.0 Unported license
Who says that geologists have no sense of humour. In 2016, Bernard Landau, Richard E. Petit, and Carlos M. Da Silva published a paper in the Journal of Paleontology describing various gastropod fossils from the Miocene (Serravallian-Tortonian) aged Gatun Formation in Panama. Among the many snail fossils they found were two species of the genus Pyruclia, one they named P. tweedledee and the other they named P. tweedledum after two characters in Lewis Carol’s book Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There.

Figure 11 - Marsupina
bufo
Credit:
Shellnut,
Creative
Commons Attribution-Share
Alike 3.0 Unported license
Fossils of two gastropod species of the genus Marsupina, M. bufo and M. nana have been found in the tuffaceous shales of the Pliocene aged Charco Azul Formation. Also called the chestnut frog shell, M. bufo was first identified by Jean Guillaume Bruguière in 1792, the snail lives today throughout the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea and the Lesser Antilles; in the Atlantic Ocean from North Carolina to Northern Brazil. The smaller M. nana, also called the dwarf frog shell, was first identified in 1829 by William Broderip and George Brettingham Sowerby, and is currently confined to the Pacific coast from the Mar de Cortes to Peru. The presence of both species in the Charco Azul Formation points to a time when the Isthmus of Panama was being formed, as discussed in this paper.

Figure 12 - Protests in
Panama in 2023. Sign indicating that "Mining is Death"
Credit:
AnyGang, Creative
Commons CC0
1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication
The mineral industry in Panama has its challenges. In 2023 there were serious protests that lead to the closure of the Cobre Panamá mine, which was once the largest copper mine in the region and the only copper mine in Panama. Recently, the owners of Cobre Panamá have been allowed to remove stockpiled copper ore from the site. Silver and gold were also formerly produced at the Cobre Panamá mine
In other mineral production, the USGS Minerals Yearbook for Central America indicates that Panama’s mineral industry produces cement at two cement plants. The most recent statisitcs from the USGS for mineral production in Panama can be found here.
Figure 13 links to an interactive mineral occurrence map of Panama from Mindat.org.

Figure 13 – Interactive
Mineral Deposit Map of Panama
Credit:
Mindat.org

Figure 14 - Gatun Locks of
the Panama Canal
Credit:
User:Stan
Shebs, Creative
CommonsAttribution-Share
Alike 3.0 Unported license
Panama does not look to be a promising place for mineral exploration. While the geology is favourable for copper/gold/silver deposits, like the Cobre Panamá mine, the politics are not favourable. The protests against mining were part of a general wave of dissatisfaction with the governmentand until these issues have been resolved, Panama is unlikely to be a good place for mineral exploration. There maybe upcoming opportunities for offshore petroleum exploration, as recent announcements indicate, so that may be worth keeping in mind. However, as with other countries in Latin America, Panama retains its Latin American pattern of governance, for good or for ill. So be warned if you plan to work there.
J. Robert Oppenheimer on freedom and scientific inquiry
The purpose of my weblog postings is to spark people's curiosity in geology. Don't entirely believe me until you've done your own research and checked the evidence. If I have sparked your curiosity in the subject of this posting, follow up with some of the links provided here. If you want to, go out into the field and examine some rocks on your own with the help of a good field guide. Follow the evidence and make up your own mind.
In science, the only authority is the evidence.