[7] The marine sediments overlying this basal stratum are composed of white, tuffaceous, thoroughly bioturbated mudstones and fine sandstones with occasional mollusk molds and thin oyster horizons, deposited in a shallow shelf environment.
[9] The age of the Gaiman Formation is established on stratigraphic correlations to other absolutely-dated sections in Patagonia and biostratigraphic data and dates to the Early Miocene (Burdigalian, or Colhuehuapian in the SALMA classification).
Argentine paleontologist Florentino Ameghino described an isolated tooth from the formation first as an ichthyodectiform fish, Portheus patagonicus in 1901, however this fossil was assigned to a delphinoid cetacean of the family Kentriodontidae by Cione and Cozzuol in 1990.
[10] Fish recorded from the formation are hexanchiform hexanchids, lamniform isurids, odontaspidids, cetorhinids, carcharhiniform carcharhinids, heterodontiform heterodontids, squatiniform squatinids myliobatiform myliobatids, perciform oplegnathids and labrids, and tetraodontiform molids.
[14] Bite marks on several of the penguin bones are attributed to terrestrial mammals such as didelphid or hathliacyniid sparassodont marsupials, common in Patagonia during the Miocene.