Age, distribution, tectonics, and eustatic controls of the Paranense and Caribbean marine transgressions in southern Bolivia and Argentina |
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Authors: | R.M. Hern ndez, T.E. Jordan, A. Dalenz Farjat, L. Echavarrí a, B.D. Idleman,J.H. Reynolds |
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Affiliation: | aXR Consultants, Gral. Savio 1035, CP 4400 Salta, Argentina;bCornell University, Geological Sciences, Snee Hall, Ithaca, NY, USA;cDepartment of Geology, Colorado School of Mines, 1500 Illinois St., Golden, CO, USA;dLehigh University, 31 Williams Drive, Bethlehem, PA, USA;eESMNS, Brevard College, Brevard, NC, USA |
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Abstract: | Marine transgression onto the South American continent took place at least twice in the Miocene along distinct paleogeographic corridors. The first event occurred between 15 and 13 Ma and the second between 10 and 5? Ma. Each event has particular dominant variables (tectonism, eustacy, sediment accumulation rate) that permitted the preservation of the record and development of the sea on the continent. The 15–13 Ma transgression was tectonically and eustatically controlled, flooding older sedimentary accommodation zones on the South American plate during a global high sea level, whereas the 105? Ma event was predominantly tectonically controlled, generated by tectonic loading created in the Cordillera Oriental fold-and-thrust belt. A new 7.72±0.31 Ma 40Ar/39Ar date from the Río Parapetí in Bolivia suggests that the 15–13 Ma transgression registered in Argentina produced no continental connection to the Caribbean transgression, registered in Bolivia, because of temporal constraints. |
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Keywords: | Andean foreland thrust belt Isotopic age Marine transgression South America Upper Miocene |
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