Oroclinal bending of the Juan Fernandez Ridge suggested by geohistory analysis of the Bahia Inglesa Formation, north-central Chile
Author
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Le Roux, Jacobus
Author
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Achurra, Luciano
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Henríquez, Álvaro
Author
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Carreño, Catalina
Author
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Rivera, Huber
Author
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Suárez, Mario E.
Author
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Ishman, Scott E.
Author
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Pyenson, Nicholas D.
Author
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Gutstein, Carolina S.
Admission date
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2016-07-01T19:42:50Z
Available date
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2016-07-01T19:42:50Z
Publication date
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2016
Cita de ítem
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Sedimentary Geology 333 (2016) 32–49
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2015.12.003
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/139375
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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The stratigraphy of the Bahia Inglesa Formation in the Caldera Basin west of Copiapo, (north-central Chile) is revised, based on hitherto unpublished stratigraphic sections and Sr-87/Sr-86 dating. The depositional environment varied from a rocky shoreline to the upper continental slope, with sea-level oscillations and tectonic movements causing numerous local unconformities as well as lateral and vertical fades changes. Geohistory and sedimentological analyses show that the area was close to the concurrent sea level at about 15.3 Ma, but at the same time being elevated about 100 m above the present sea level. Although the basin then subsided at least 350 m until around 6 Ma, marine deposition was only recorded after 10.4 Ma. This suggests that the sea level initially dropped faster than the rate of subsidence so that subaerial erosion occurred. The period of subaerial exposure before 10.4 Ma can be attributed to the presence of a NE-trending branch of the Juan Fernandez Ridge below the continental crust at this time, whereas the ensuing subsidence was due to subduction erosion and crustal accommodation in its wake as it migrated south along the South American coastline. The subsequent uplift of at least 250 m can be explained by an acceleration in plate expansion and isostatic rebound of the continental crust after being partially submerged in the upper mantle. The uplift-subsidence-uplift pattern mirrors those recorded around the Nazca Ridge in Peru, as well as in similar basins to the south of Caldera. However, a higher southward migration rate of the Juan Fernandez Ridge against the edge of the South American Plate and less intense uplift subsidence-uplift cycles are recorded in the latter basins. This can possibly be attributed to oroclinal bending of the ridge due to friction with the overlying continental plate, which diminished the angle of incidence and the intensity of the stress field, but increased the migration velocity of the ridge relative to the coastline.
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Patrocinador
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Project Fondecyt, Project National Geographic Society Committee on Research Exploration, Project CONICYT/FONDAP.