New insights on the origin of the Mesón Alto deposit, Yeso Valley, central Chile: A composite deposit of glacial and landslide processes?
Artículo
Publication date
2014Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Deckart, Katja
Cómo citar
New insights on the origin of the Mesón Alto deposit, Yeso Valley, central Chile: A composite deposit of glacial and landslide processes?
Author
Abstract
The Mesón Alto chaotic deposit, located in the Main Cordillera at about 33°40’S, is an important landform with a volume of ca. 4.5 km3 unconsolidated material deposited downstream of the Yeso Dam in the Yeso Valley, Río Maipo drainage basin. Historical work related this large deposit to a glacial origin whereas later on, it was assigned to a megalandslide that originated in the Cerro Mesón Alto Massif. First results of integrated fieldwork along with petrographic and geochemical laboratory work on granitoid blocks from five different portions of the deposit, compared with the major outcropping intrusive units in the neighbourhood (La Gloria Pluton, Cerro Mesón Alto Massif and Cerro Aparejo Intrusion) point to a landslide origin of the surface blocks. The results suggest that granitoid fragments of the deposit most likely belong to the Cerro Mesón Alto Massif, the proposed source of the rock avalanche. However, morphometric parameters and field observations support the idea of a rock avalanche deposited on top of glacial material. Therefore, the Mesón Alto deposit should be assigned to a composite origin. Confirmation of a post-glacial, large volume rock avalanche in a strategic area for existent infrastructure for Santiago water supply and ongoing energy projects is fundamental for a correct hazard and risk assessment of the region.
General note
Artículo de publicación SciELO
Patrocinador
Field work was supported by the Department of Geology
at the Universidad de Chile through its Engineering Geology and Natural Hazards Program and by a professor
interchange grant of the Cuyo National University to S. Moreiras. The authors would like to thank J. Martínez, Department of Geology, for geochemical analyses of the five collected blocks and CAI sample. M. Lara helped with the preparation of figure 2. We are grateful for the field trip assistance and manuscript discussions with L. Iturrizaga.
Quote Item
Andean Geology 41 (1): 248-258. January, 2014
Collections