Autor: |
Cosentino, Nicolás J., Jordan, Teresa E. |
Zdroj: |
Tectonics; Jan2017, Vol. 36 Issue 1, p137-162, 26p |
Abstrakt: |
Several lines of geomorphic and geophysical reasoning suggest that the western fore arc of northern Chile has undergone kilometer-scale surface uplift relative to sea level during the late Neogene. We have developed a new paleoaltimeter based on the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of ancient gypsic soils in the hyperarid Atacama Desert and used it to investigate the uplift history of the Andean fore-arc coastal mountain range (Coastal Cordillera) and of the Andean fore-arc nonmarine basin surface (Central Depression). Sampled sites span ~330 km strike-parallel distance and elevations between 450 and 1850 m above sea level (asl). A minority of the sites place firm constraints on minimum or maximum vertical movements in an absolute framework. For the majority of locations, the data determine a maximum permissible magnitude of uplift. In all cases the magnitudes of paleo-elevation changes are small compared to the elevation of the study area relative to sea level. We conclude that more than 45% of the ~1000 m asl average elevation of the Central Depression main axis and that more than 70% of the ~900 m asl average elevation of the westernmost Coastal Cordillera in the study area were achieved by preearly Pliocene regional-scale tectonic processes. These results refute the hypothesis of kilometer-scale surface uplift of the western nonmarine Andean fore arc during the late Neogene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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