4.5 Article

Palaeogeography and diachronous infill of an ancient deep-marine foreland basin, Upper Cretaceous Cerro Toro Formation, Magallanes Basin

Journal

BASIN RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 269-294

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2117.2011.00528.x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Stanford Project on Deep-water Depositional Systems (SPODDS)
  2. Aera Energy
  3. Anadarko Petroleum Corporation
  4. BHP Billiton
  5. Chevron
  6. ConocoPhillips
  7. Hess Corporation
  8. Marathon Oil Company
  9. Nexen Energy
  10. Occidental Petroleum
  11. Petrobras
  12. Reliance Industries Ltd.
  13. Rohol- Aufsuchungs A.G. (RAG)
  14. Schlumberger
  15. Shell
  16. GSA
  17. Stanford A.I. Levorsen grant
  18. McGee grant

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The details of how narrow, orogen-parallel ocean basins are filled with sediment by large axial submarine channels is important to understand because these depositional systems commonly form in through-like basins in various tectonic settings. The Magallanes foreland basin is an excellent location to study an orogen-parallel deep-marine system. Conglomerate lenses of the Upper Cretaceous Cerro Toro Formation have been previously interpreted to represent the fill of a single submarine channel (48 km wide, >100 km long) that funneled coarse detritus southward along the basin axis. This interpretation was based on lithologic correlations. New U/Pb dating of zircons from volcanic ashes and sandstones, coupled with strontium isotope stratigraphy, refine the controls on depositional ages and provenance. Results demonstrate that north-south oriented conglomerate lenses are contemporaneous within error limits (ca. 8482 Ma) supporting that they represent parts of an axial channel belt. Channel deposits 20 km west of the axial location are 8782 Ma in age. These channels are partly contemporaneous with the ones within the axial channel belt, making it likely that they represent feeders to the axial channel system. The northern Cerro Toro Formation spans a Turonian to Campanian interval (ca. 9082 Ma) whereas the formation top, 70 km to the south, is as young as ca. 76 Ma. KolmogorovSmirnoff statistical analysis on detrital zircon age distributions shows that the northern uppermost Cerro Toro Formation yields a statistically different age distribution than other samples from the same formation but shows no difference relative to the overlying Tres Pasos Formation. These results suggest the partly coeval deposition of both formations. Integration of previously acquired geochronologic and stratigraphic data with new data show a pronounced southward younging pattern in all four marine formations in the Magallanes Basin. Highly diachronous infilling may be an important depositional pattern for narrow, orogen-parallel ocean basins.

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