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Authordc.contributor.authorRapalini, A.E. 
Authordc.contributor.authorCalderón, M. es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorSinger, S. es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorHervé Allamand, Francisco es_CL
Authordc.contributor.authorCordani, U. es_CL
Admission datedc.date.accessioned2010-01-14T13:44:29Z
Available datedc.date.available2010-01-14T13:44:29Z
Publication datedc.date.issued2008-06-02
Cita de ítemdc.identifier.citationTECTONOPHYSICS Volume: 452 Issue: 1-4 Pages: 29-41 Published: JUN 2 2008en_US
Identifierdc.identifier.issn0040-1951
Identifierdc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125120
Abstractdc.description.abstractA paleomagnetic study was carried out on the Late Jurassic Sarmiento Ophiolitic Complex (SOC) exposed in the Magallanes fold and thrust belt in the southern Patagonian Andes (southern Chile). This complex, mainly consisting of a thick succession of pillow-lavas, sheeted dikes and gabbros, is a seafloor remnant of the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Rocas Verdes basin that developed along the south-western margin of South America. Stepwise thermal and alternating field demagnetization permitted the isolation of a post-folding characteristic remanence, apparently carried by fine grain (SD?) magnetite, both in the pillow-lavas and dikes. The mean “in situ” direction for the SOC is Dec: 286.9°, Inc: −58.5°, α95: 6.9°, N: 11 (sites). Rock magnetic properties, petrography and whole-rock K–Ar ages in the same rocks are interpreted as evidence of correlation between remanence acquisition and a greenschist facies metamorphic overprint that must have occurred during latest stages or after closure and tectonic inversion of the basin in the Late Cretaceous. The mean remanence direction is anomalous relative to the expected Late Cretaceous direction from stable South America. Particularly, a declination anomaly over 50° is suggestively similar to paleomagnetically interpreted counter clockwise rotations found in thrust slices of the Jurassic El Quemado Fm. located over 100 km north of the study area in Argentina. Nevertheless, a significant ccw rotation of the whole SOC is difficult to reconcile with geologic evidence and paleogeographic models that suggest a narrow back-arc basin sub-parallel to the continental margin. A rigid-body 30° westward tilting of the SOC block around a horizontal axis trending NNW, is considered a much simpler explanation, being consistent with geologic evidence. This may have occurred as a consequence of inverse reactivation of old normal faults, which limit both the SOC exposures and the Cordillera Sarmiento to the East. The age of tilting is unknown but it must postdate remanence acquisition in the Late Cretaceous. Two major orogenic events of the southern Patagonian Andes, in the Eocene (ca. 42 Ma) and Middle Miocene (ca. 12 Ma), respectively, could have caused the proposed tilting.en_US
Patrocinadordc.description.sponsorshipThe authors wish to thank FONDECYT (Chile, Project 1050431 and ARTG-04 of CONICYT and PBCYT), CONICET (Argentina), Universidad de Chile, Universidad de Buenos Aires and Universidade de Sao Paulo for financial support for this study.en_US
Lenguagedc.language.isoenen_US
Publisherdc.publisherELSEVIER SCIENCE BVen_US
Keywordsdc.subjectPaleomagnetismen_US
Títulodc.titleTectonic implications of a paleomagnetic study of the Sarmiento Ophiolitic Complex, southern Chileen_US
Document typedc.typeArtículo de revista


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