Multiple glaciations of the Cordon del Plata, Mendoza, Argentina

Autor: Arturo E. Corte, William J. Wayne
Rok vydání: 1983
Předmět:
Zdroj: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 42:185-209
ISSN: 0031-0182
DOI: 10.1016/0031-0182(83)90044-5
Popis: Evidence exists for four glaciations in the Rio Blanco basin west of Mendoza, Argentina. Morphology, superposition of tills, soil-profile development, loess thickness, and boulder weathering have been the techniques most useful in mapping the tills. Glaciers of Vallecitos (= Wisconsinan) age extended to 2600 m and left distinctive moraines. Tills of two pre-Vallecitos glacier advances cover the floor of the valley from 2600 m to below 2100 m, and remnants of one of the tills extend nearly to the junction with Rio Mendoza (1400 m) 13 km below the lowest Vallecitos moraines. These deposits were considered to be mudflows rather than tills by Polanski; however, the quartz sand grains examined with SEM have surface textures characteristic of glacial abrasion. The sediments, thus, are more likely glacial than mudflow deposits. One still older till caps ridges as much as 200 m above the present valley floor. Vallecitos glaciers did not smooth the walls of the wide valleys through which they flowed; the valleys had been enlarged by the larger ice tongues during one or more of the earlier glaciations. Frost shattering of the rhyolite and quartzite has altered much of the distinctive glacial valley shape, and talus lies between valley walls and Vallecitos lateral moraines. Holocene glaciations seem to be in phase with those of the Northern Hemisphere, and the Vallecitos glaciation coincided with oxygen isotope stage 2 and the Wisconsin of North America. The next older glaciation may correlate with oxygen isotope stage 6 and the Illinoian glaciation of North America. A till that underlies it is difficult to correlate and is clearly much older, but postdates the last major uplift of the range. It may represent isotope stage 12, and the period that followed it was more moist than other interglacial ages in this area. The oldest, Los Mesones, may correlate with Mercer's “Greatest Glaciation” of Patagonia, 1.0 to 1.2 m.y. ago. Although it is beyond the established oxygen isotope stages, a long cold period is present on the curves at this time, nd it coincides with one of the glaciations of the “Nebraskan—Kansan” complex of North America.
Databáze: OpenAIRE