4.5 Article

Development of an incipient Paleogene topography between the present-day Eastern Andean Plateau (Puna) and the Eastern Cordillera, southern Central Andes, NW Argentina

Journal

BASIN RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 1194-1217

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bre.12510

Keywords

Andean Plateau; Eastern Cordillera; Eocene deformation; growth structures; northern Puna; north-western Argentina; southern Central Andes

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas [PICT-0432, PICT-1928]
  2. Ministerium fur Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kultur [IGK2018]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [STR373/34-1]

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The study of the structural and topographic evolution of orogenic plateaus in the Andean region reveals tectonic shortening and irregular deformation patterns during the early Cenozoic period. The findings suggest that Paleogene deformation along the eastern margin of the present-day plateau may be related to reactivated basement heterogeneities from regional Paleozoic mountain building.
The structural and topographic evolution of orogenic plateaus is an important research topic because of its impact on atmospheric circulation patterns, the amount and distribution of rainfall, and resulting changes in surface processes. The Puna region in the north-western Argentina (between 13 degrees S and 27 degrees S) is part of the Andean Plateau, which is the world's second largest orogenic plateau. In order to investigate the deformational events responsible for the initial growth of this part of the Andean plateau, we carried out structural and stratigraphic investigations within the present-day transition zone between the northern Puna and the adjacent Eastern Cordillera to the east. This transition zone is characterized by ubiquitous exposures of continental middle Eocene redbeds of the Casa Grande Formation. Our structural mapping, together with a sedimentological analysis of these units and their relationships with the adjacent mountain ranges, has revealed growth structures and unconformities that are indicative of syntectonic deposition. These findings support the notion that tectonic shortening in this part of the Central Andes was already active during the middle Paleogene, and that early Cenozoic deformation in the region that now constitutes the Puna occurred in a spatially irregular manner. The patterns of Paleogene deformation and uplift along the eastern margin of the present-day plateau correspond to an approximately north-south oriented swath of reactivated basement heterogeneities (i.e. zones of mechanical weakness) stemming from regional Paleozoic mountain building that may have led to local concentration of deformation belts.

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