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Paleoenvironmental reconstruction in the western lacustrine plain of Llancanelo Lake,Mendoza, Argentina
Authors:R Violante  A Osella  M de la Vega  E Rovere  M Osterrieth
Institution:1. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Padre Jorge Contreras 1300, 5500 Mendoza, Argentina;2. Museo de Historia Natural de San Rafael, Ballofet s/n, 5600 San Rafael, Mendoza, Argentina;3. Instituto de Ciencias de la Tierra y Ambientales de La Pampa (INCITAP, CONICET-UNLPam), Universidad Nacional de La Pampa, Av. Uruguay 151, 6300 Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Argentina;4. GeoQuest Research Centre, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong NSW 2522, Australia;5. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Adelaide SA 5005, Australia;1. Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing 100029, China;2. Institute of Crustal Dynamics, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing 100085, China
Abstract:Lakes are key sites for studying paleoclimates. Llancanelo Lake (southern Mendoza Province, western Argentina) is an endoreic, highly saline water body located in the southern extreme of a tectonic basin, the Central or Huarpes Depression. The lake is located between the Andean Cordillera, San Rafael Block and Payenia Volcanic Field. The lake evolved as a major regional depocenter during the Pliocene-Quaternary, hence it contains important thicknesses of intra and extra basinal clastic and evaporitic sediments mainly dominated by volcaniclastic products. The main conditioning factors in the lake evolution were arc and back-arc volcanism as well as climatic changes. Geomorphological and sedimentary evidence supports the hypothesis that the lake was in past times larger than in present days. This paper estimates the lake’s former extension on the western lacustrine plain using electromagnetic induction (EMI) and geoelectricity (Multielectrode Resistivity Meter) surveys, as well as shallow wells, along an 8 km long transect perpendicular to the lake’s western shoreline. The geophysical and sedimentological information, as well as microfaunal studies, lab analysis and petrographic/EDAX determinations, support the presence, in the subsoil, of a lacustrine sequence at least 30 m thick composed mainly of volcaniclastic sediments. Volcanic eruptions and climatic changes influenced the evolution of the lake, producing intercalations in the lacustrine sedimentary sequences of ash layers, evaporites, soils, and eolian and swamp deposits.
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