Book Chapter10.1007/978-3-319-23060-3_9
The North Patagonian Orogen: Meso-Cenozoic Evolution from the Andes to the Foreland Area
Guido M. Gianni,Andrés Folguera,César Navarrete,Alfonso Encinas,Andrés Echaurren +4 more
- 01 Jan 2016
- pp 173-200
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TL;DR: A review of recent advances in different aspects of the Patagonian orogen and its related broken foreland system reveals a close relation between the evolution of both sectors as discussed by the authors, which enabled them to integrate them in an evolutionary model connecting tectonic events from the North-Patagonian Andes to the broken Foreland area throughout the Mesozoic and Cenozoic.
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Abstract: In the last decades, an important amount of studies have dealt with the Patagonian orogen evolution. However, a holistic approach on the evolution of this sector has not been addressed yet. A review of recent advances in different aspects of the Patagonian orogen and its related broken foreland system reveals a close relation between the evolution of both sectors. This enabled us to integrate them in an evolutionary model connecting tectonic events from the North Patagonian Andes to the broken foreland area throughout the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. During the breakup of Western Gondwana, beginning in Jurassic times, several extensional basins developed in the Patagonian region. In late Early Cretaceous to Paleocene, a switch in the tectonic regime caused the initial uplift of the North Patagonian Andes and the fragmentation of the foreland area. Synchronously, an eastward magmatic arc expansion is documented at the retroarc zone. At this moment, a series of mid-ocean ridges collided one after another against the Patagonian margin. A causative relation between young lithosphere subduction , slab shallowing , orogenesis and eruption of mafic magmatism at the arc and retroarc region has been proposed. In concert to regional compression , synorogenic foreland rifting occurred transversally to the main Andean trend in the San Jorge Gulf Basin , describing an exceptional setting for this type of rifting mechanism. From the Eocene to early Miocene, a westward retraction of the magmatic arc, possibly related to roll-back , was synchronous to the Traiguen Basin, formed over highly attenuated crust that splitted the arc and forearc areas. To the east, extensive intraplate magmatism began in the Patagonian foreland covering partially the broken foreland orogen. During the Neogene, an acceleration of the convergence rate between Nazca and South American plate s caused the renewal of Patagonian Andes uplift and reactivation of the broken foreland system . Patagonian orogenesis along with the Late Cenozoic global cooling event triggered aridization of the foreland zone, having dramatic consequences for the Patagonian fauna and flora.
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Citations
Neogene Growth of the Patagonian Andes
Andrés Folguera,Guido M. Gianni,Alfonso Encinas,Orlando Álvarez,Darío Orts,Andrés Echaurren,Vanesa D. Litvak,César Navarrete,Daniel Sellés,Jonathan Tobal,Miguel E. Ramos,Lucas Fennell,Lucía Fernández Paz,Mario Giménez,Patricia Martinez,Francisco Ruiz,Sofía B. Iannelli +16 more
- 01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that after a Late Cretaceous to Paleocene stage of mountain building, the North Patagonian Andes were extensionally reactivated leading to a period of crustal attenuation.
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Major lineages of Loasaceae subfam. Loasoideae diversified during the Andean uplift.
Rafael Acuña Castillo,Rafael Acuña Castillo,Federico Luebert,Federico Luebert,Tilo Henning,Maximilian Weigend +5 more
TL;DR: The results presented here suggest that the historical biogeography of the continental scale radiation of Loasoideae, follows the sequence and timing of the development of temperate and mid to high-elevation habitats across South America during the Tertiary.
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Comparative structural analysis of inverted structures in the San Bernardo fold belt (Golfo San Jorge basin, Argentina): Inversion controls and tecto-sedimentary context of the Chubut Group
José Oscar Allard,Nicolás Foix,Nicolás Foix,Sebastián Alberto Bueti,Sebastián Alberto Bueti,Federico Manuel Sánchez,María Leonor Ferreira,Mario Atencio +7 more
TL;DR: The geometries of the inverted structures are poorly vergent and can be classified as asymmetric anticlines or pop-up growth folds as discussed by the authors, which is consistent with a tecto-sedimentary context dominated by normal fault reactivations during the deposition of the basal units of the Chubut Group (Barremian-Albian).
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New insights from the Neocomian basins in the West of Chubut and Santa Cruz provinces, Argentina
Muriel Miller,Juliana Marino +1 more
TL;DR: A regional overview of the Neocomian basins developed in the provinces of Chubut and Santa Cruz, in Argentina, on the light of an extensive compilation of 2D and 3D seismic and borehole data is presented in this paper.
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Changing fluvial styles in volcaniclastic successions: A cretaceous example from the Cerro Barcino Formation, Patagonia
A. Martín Umazano,A. Martín Umazano,J. Marcelo Krause,Eduardo S. Bellosi,Mariano Perez,Mariano Perez,Graciela Visconti,Ricardo Nestor Melchor,Ricardo Nestor Melchor +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, Umazano, Aldo Martin, et al. presented an overview of the work of the Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra y Ambientales de La Pampa (ITEAM) in Argentina.
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TL;DR: New SHRIMP U-Pb zircon, Rb-Sr whole-rock, and 40Ar-39Ar data are presented for the Jurassic silicic volcanic rocks and related granitoids of Patagonia and the Antarctic Peninsula as discussed by the authors.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify three distinct ridge-trench collision events and conclude that the configuration of the spreading centers and transform faults on the Chile Rise is the chief factor controlling ridgetrench tectonic interaction.
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The Chon Aike province of Patagonia and related rocks in West Antarctica: A silicic large igneous province
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TL;DR: The field occurrence, age, classification and geochemistry of the Mesozoic volcanic rocks of Patagonia and West Antarctica are reviewed, using published and new information in this paper, where a diachronism is recognized between the Early-Middle Jurassic volcanism of eastern Patagonian (Marifil and Chon Aike formations) and the Middle Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous volcanisms of the Andean Cordillera (El Quemado, Ibanez and Tobifera formations).
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