Cenozoic tectonic evolution in the Central Andes in northern Chile and west central Bolivia: implications for paleogeographic, magmatic and mountain building evolution
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Charrier González, Reynaldo
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Cenozoic tectonic evolution in the Central Andes in northern Chile and west central Bolivia: implications for paleogeographic, magmatic and mountain building evolution
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Abstract
A review of available stratigraphic, structural,
and magmatic evolution in northernmost Chile, and adjacent
Peru and Bolivia shows that in this region: (1) compression
on the Paleogene intra-arc during the middle
Eocene Incaic phase formed the NNE-SSW-oriented
Incaic range along the present-day Precordillera and
Western Cordillera, and (2) post-Incaic tectonic conditions
remained compressive until present, contrasting with other
regions of the Andes, where extensional episodes occurred
during part of this time lapse. A late Oligocene–early
Miocene peak of deformation caused further uplift. The
Incaic range formed a pop-up structure bounded by two
thrusts systems of diverging vergencies; it represented a
major paleogeographic feature that separated two domains
with different tectonic and paleogeographic evolutions, and
probably formed the Andean water divide. This range has
been affected by intense erosion and was symmetrically
flanked by two major basins, the Pampa del Tamarugal and
the Altiplano. Magmatic activity remained located along
the previous Late Cretaceous–early Eocene arc with slight
eastward shift. Further compression caused westvergent
thrusting and uplift along the western Eastern Cordillera
bounding the Altiplano basin to the east by another pop-up
shaped ridge. Eastward progression of deformation caused
eastvergent thrusting of the Eastern Cordillera and
Subandean zone.
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Int J Earth Sci (Geol Rundsch) (2013) 102:235–264
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