Upper Cretaceous neritic to hemipelagic successions from the eastern Colombian Cordillera display frequent and rhythmic intercalations of phosphate-rich sediment. Their accumulation is attributed to a back-arc setting between the Andean arctrench system and the Guayana cratonic shield. In three examined sections near Tausa, Tunja, and Iza (all north of Bogotá), respectively, the phosphate-rich sediments occur in 1-15 m thick coarsening-upward series ideally consisting - from the base to the top - of porcelanite, organic-rich claystone, siltstone, sandstone, and a condensed and thoroughly burrowed top bed. Phosphatic particles appear either in thin gravity-flow deposits or in pristine, in-situ occurrences near the base of these successions, ...