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Tectonic,sea-level,and climatic controls on Late Paleozoic sedimentation in the western basins of Argentina
Institution:1. Instituto y Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, Centro de Investigaciones de la Geosfera y la Biosfera – Conicet, España 400 (Norte), San Juan, Argentina;2. Instituto de Geociencias Básicas, Aplicadas y Ambientales de Buenos Aires – Conicet, Departamento de Geología, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Pabellón 11, Ciudad Universitaria, 1428 Buenos Aires, Argentina;3. Instituto y Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de San Juan, España 400 (Norte), San Juan, Argentina;1. Department of Biological & Environmental Sciences, Le Moyne College, Syracuse, NY 13214, USA;2. New Mexico Museum of Natural History, 1801 Mountain Road N.W., Albuquerque, NM 87014, USA;1. Departamento de Geologia, Universidade Federal do Paraná, Caixa Postal 19001, CEP 81531-980, Curitiba, PR, Brazil;2. Departamento de Geologia Aplicada, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Av. 24-A, 1515, CEP 13506-900, Rio Claro, SP, Brazil;3. Departamento de Paleontologia e Estratigrafia, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Caixa Postal 15001, CEP 91501-970, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
Abstract:Tectonic activity, sea-level changes, and the climate controlled sedimentation in Late Paleozoic basins of western Argentina. The role of each factor is investigated from the geologic record of the Río Blanco and Paganzo basins using three hierarchical orders of stratigraphic bounding surfaces. First-order surfaces correspond to regional unconformities, second-order ones to local unconformities with a lesser regional extent, and third-order surfaces represent locally extended sedimentary truncation. Using this methodology, the Carboniferous–Permian record of the Paganzo and Río Blanco basins may be divided into two megasequences, four sequences, and 12 stratigraphic sections. Megasequences are bounded by regional unconformities that result from tectonic events important enough to cause regional paleogeographic changes. Sequences are limited by minor regional extension surfaces related to local tectonic movements or significant sea-level falls. Finally, stratigraphic sections correspond to extended sedimentary truncations produced by transgressive events or major climatic changes. Sequence I is mainly composed of marine deposits divided into basal infill of the basin (Section 1) and Tournaisian–Visean transgressive deposits (Section 2). Sequence II is bounded by a sharp erosional surface and begins with coarse conglomerates (Section 3), followed by fluvial and shallow marine sedimentary rocks (Section 4) that pass upward into shales and diamictites (Section 5). The base of Sequence III is marked by an extended unconformity covered by Early Pennsylvanian glacial sedimentary rocks (Section 6) that represent the most important glacial event along the western margin of Gondwana. Postglacial deposits (Section 7) occur in the two basins and comprise both glaciolacustrine (eastern region) and transgressive marine (central and western regions) deposits. By the Moscovian–Kasimovian, fluvial sandstones and conglomerates were deposited in most of the Paganzo Basin (Section 8), while localized volcanic activity took place in the Río Blanco Basin. Near the end of the Carboniferous, an important transgression is recorded in the major part of the Río Blanco Basin (Section 9), reaching the westernmost portion area of the Paganzo Basin. Finally, Sequence IV shows important differences between the Paganzo and Río Blanco basins; fluvial red beds (Section 10), eolian sandstones (Section 11), and low-energy fluvial deposits (Section 12) prevailed in the Paganzo Basin whereas volcaniclastic sedimentation and volcanism dominated in the Río Blanco Basin. Thus, tectonic events, sea-level changes and climate exerted a strong and complex control on the evolution of the Río Blanco and Paganzo basins. The interaction of these allocyclic controls produced not only characteristic facies association patterns but also different kinds of stratigraphic bounding surfaces.
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