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  3. Tectonic and paleoenvironmental evolution of Mesozoic sedimentary basins along the Argentinian Andes foothills (32°–54°S)

Tectonic and paleoenvironmental evolution of Mesozoic sedimentary basins along the Argentinian Andes foothills (32°–54°S)

Chronoenvironmental and tectonic charts are presented for Mesozoic basins located along the Andean foothills of the South American plate. On the basis of the main tectonic events, pre-Andean basins, break-up-related basins, extensional back-arc basins, and Andean foreland basins are recognized. The pre-Andean basins were formed by continental extension and strike-slip movement before the development of the Mesozoic–Cenozoic Andean magmatic arc. Upper Permian to Middle Triassic extension along Palaeozoic terrane sutures resulted in rifting, bimodal magmatism (Choiyoi group), and continental deposition (Cuyo basin). From the Late Triassic to the Early Jurassic, continental extension related to the collapse of the Gondwana orogen initiated a series of long, narrow half-grabens that filled with continental volcaniclastic deposits. These depocenters were later integrated into the Neuquén basin. Coeval development of the shallow marine Pampa de Agnia basin (42–44°S) is related to short-lived extension, probably driven by dextral displacement along major strike-slip faults (e.g. the Gastre fault system). Widespread extension related to the Gondwana breakup (180–165 Ma) and the opening of the Weddell Sea reached the western margin of the South American plate. As a result, wide areas of Patagonia were affected by intraplate volcanism (Chon Aike province), and early rifting occurred in the Magallanes basin. The Andean magmatic arc was almost fully developed by Late Jurassic times. A transgressive stage with starvation and anoxia characterized the Neuquén basin. In western Patagonia, back-arc and intra-arc extension produced the opening of several grabens associated with explosive volcanism and lava flows (e.g. Río Mayo, El Quemado). To the south, a deep marginal basin floored by oceanic crust (Rocas Verdes) developed along the back-arc axis. In mid-to late Cretaceous times, Andean compressional tectonics related to South Atlantic spreading caused the inversion of previous extensional structures and the beginning of a retro-arc foreland phase in the Neuquén and Austral basins.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    Tectonic and paleoenvironmental evolution of Mesozoic sedimentary basins along the Argentinian Andes foothills (32°–54°S)
  • Year

    2003
  • Author(s)

    Franzese, J.R., Spalletti, L., Gómez-Pérez, I. and Macdonald, D.I.M.
  • Journal

    Journal of South American Earth Sciences
  • Volume

    16
  • Issue

    1
  • Page(s)

    81-90
  • URL

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0895-9811(03)00020-8

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