4.7 Article

Stratigraphic record across a retroarc basin inversion: Rocas Verdes-Magallanes Basin, Patagonian Andes, Chile

Journal

GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN
Volume 117, Issue 11-12, Pages 1596-1614

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/B25708.1

Keywords

Patagonian Andes; orogenic evolution; backarc basin; Magallanes foreland basin; provenance; geochemical modeling

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The Mesozoic evolution of the Andean Cordillera of southern Patagonia is recorded in two formations that are now part of the fold-thrust belt: the Zapata Formation and the Punta Barrosa Formation. Extension in the Ultima Esperanza region began in the Late Jurassic with deposition of the marine volcaniclastic Tobifera Formation and eventually resulted in the full-fledged oceanic Rocas Verdes Basin. The Zapata Formation was deposited over a time span of similar to 50 m.y. in an irregular basin ultimately bordered by an Early Cretaceous arc to the west. It is characterized by interbedded shale and siltstone mostly deposited in shallow water and, in areas of oceanic crust emplacement, also as deep-water hemipelagic deposits. Sediments of the Zapata Formation were derived initially from local oceanic upwarps-and Tobifera highs and later from the andesitic cover of the juvenile are and/or exhumed oceanic crust. The paucity of sandstone in the Zapata Formation in the Ultima Esperanza region indicates a highly irregular basin partitioned by prominent horsts, with sand deposition confined to sub-basins closer to the are. Changes in depositional regimes and sediment dispersal patterns related to the onset of Andean contraction and formation of the Magallanes foreland basin are recorded by sediments of the overlying Punta Barrosa Formation. This formation records the evolution of a fold-thrust belt on the basis of the multimodal mineralogical and geochemical character of its sandstone and shale. The presence of an arc is indicated, but nearby Andean metamorphic terranes are more significantly represented in Punta Barrosa sediments. Stratigraphic details across the Zapata and Punta Barrosa Formations indicate that deformation and development of a proto-Andean Cordillera in southern South America was initiated in the late Mesozoic and involved conspicuous crustal shortening.

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