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14 documentos corresponden a la consulta.
Palabras contadas: andes: 87, neuquen: 92
Morabito, E.G. - Folguera, A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2005;60(4):742-761
2005

Descripción: The Andes located in the central Neuquén (38°-39°S), which belong to the southern Central Andes (35°-39°S), have recorded a similar chronology of uplift than the neighbor northern Patagonian Andes (39°-46°S), Both areas have been formed trough successive phases of contraction in the Late Cretaceous, Middle Eocene and Late Miocene respectively. However, the Neuquén Andes have experienced two discrete phases of orogenic relaxation, during the Late Oligocene and Pliocene-Quaternary, which make then distinctive respect to the area located to the south. Field studies have shown new evidences of an episodic behavior of the fold and thrust belt in Neuquen, corresponding to compressive phases followed by stages of crustal collapse, at least since the Middle Cretaceous. The study of two main morphostructural units in the arc and retroarc area at 37°-39°S, the Alto de Copahue Pino Hachado, and its continuation to the north in the Chilean Andes (Laguna de la Laja), and the Loncopué trough respectively exemplify this particular behavior. A structural and a stratigraphie study in those areas have given a new evolutionary framework for the Neuquén Andes. © 2005 Asociación Geológica Argentina.
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Mescua, J.F. - Giambiagi, L.B. - Ramos, V.A.
Andean Geol. 2013;40(1):102-116
2013

Descripción: The Cordillera de los Andes is the typical example of a subduction-related orogen. Its present topography is the result of post-Miocene uplift, however, Andean compressional deformation and uplift started in the Late Cretaceous, as increasingly recognized in different sectors of the mountain belt. We present evidences of a Late Cretaceous event of compressional deformation in the southern Central Andes (35oS), reflected in syn-orogenic foreland basin deposits assigned to the Neuquén Group in Argentina and the Brownish-Red Clastic Unit in Chile. Comparison of the facies of these units allows us to recognize a sector proximal to the Late Cretaceous orogenic front, a distal sector with sediment provenance from the forebulge and a western sector where the sediments where deposited within the Late Cretaceous mountain belt. On this basis, we assign the orogenic front to an inverted Jurassic normal fault, the Río del Cobre fault, and reconstruct the structure of the easternmost Late Cretaceous Andes at this latitude. The change in the location of the orogenic front north and south of 35oS allows us to recognize a long-lived change in behavior in Andean evolution in this sector, which correlates with a change in the shape and the deposits of Mesozoic Neuquén basin.
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Mescua, J.F. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;65(1):111-122
2009

Descripción: Results of a detailed geologic survey of the Río Borbollón area, located in the Cordillera Principal of the province of Mendoza are presented. The stratigraphic record of the area corresponds to a Jurassic-early Cretaceous sedimentary succession, the products of Neogene igneous activity and Quaternary deposits. The Tres Esquinas and La Manga Formations of Jurassic age were recognized for the first time in the study area. The main structural features of the area are described and interpreted based on the obtained data and previous works. A balanced structural cross section of the Malargüe fold and thrust belt at 34°15'S depicts the structural style and the amount of orogenic shortening in this region of the Andes.
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Ferrer, J.A. - Pereyra, F.X. - Villegas, D.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 1999;54(3):270-280
1999

Descripción: Landforms and soils in the Traful River Valley, Neuquén Province. The Andes Patagónicos Region is characterised by the presence of strong west-east bioclimatic, geomorphological and lithostratigraphical gradients, that controlled the genesis and geographical distribution of soils. In this contribution soil-landscape relationships in a sector of a transitional zone in the northern Andes Patagónicos are studied. The Traful River valley is located in Neuquén Province aproximately at 40°40′S and 71°15′W. Diverse geomorphological units were distinguished which were formed through glacial and fluvioglacial action, and partially modified in recent times by fluvial and eolian processes and by mass wasting. Holocen ashes and lapilli were deposited in different volcanic events and constitute the soils'main parent material. We recognize soils belong to three orders: entisols, mollisols and andisols. A strong gradient of variations in soils properties was observed. The Andisolization process decrease with distance from the Cordillera zone. © 1999 Asociación Geológica Argentina.
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González Díaz, E.F. - Folguera, A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;64(4):569-585
2009

Descripción: The previous analysis of the prehistoric slide phenomena in the main Andes of Neuquén Province in Argentina (36o-38oS), triggered the study of those located south of this la-titude. Therefore a new set of mass wasting deposits has been identified, whose trigger factors and corresponding tectonic framework, where they are located, differ from the northern slides. Their study was performed in three specific areas: Aluminé, Chapelco and Arroyo Limay Chico. Earth flows predominate in relation to slumps. The only exception is the Chapelco rock avalanche. Their occurrence seems to be related to the presence of Limay Chico member of the Caleufú Formation, whose lithology (expanding clays), particular rheology before water saturation, and particular disposition underlying basaltic lava and conglomeradic plains were conditioning factors. The trigger factor of the Present and prehistoric earth flows has been intense orographic precipitations. Water saturation reduced friction and cohesion in materials, incrementing water pore pressure and producing slope instabilities. Rotational slides are related to the slope basal erosion produced by lateral river migration and additionally to precipitations. Slope orientation has been important in determining location of main slides. Lateral slope release through the flanks of glacial valleys due to debutressing because of the glacial retire in the area, has produced instability and rock fracturation that led to slide phenomena. The Chapelco rock avalanche is particularly related to copious precipitations during postglacial times. Thus sliding main trigger factors south of 38oS differ from those pro-posed for the northern area where earthquakes dominated. Their specific age is still unknown, although their geomorphologic analysis allow to constraint a postglacial age for all these occurrences. However, temporal relationships are lacking for the specific case of the arroyo Limay Chico, beyond the glaciated area.
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Mateo FerNández Caso, P.M. - Montero, D.G. - Leal, P.R. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2011;68(2):173-184
2011

Descripción: Magmatism related to the growth and migration of the Andean arc was developed from the 36°40'S to the 38°20'S latitude, in the northwestern sector of the Neuquén Province, by the end of the Mesozoic. Hypabyssal and extrusive facies, which outcrop in the Pichaihue area, were described based on petrologic studies. The first ones are composed of andesites that are emplaced as lacoliths, dikes or sills intruding the Mesozoic sedimentary sequences. In addition, basalts outcrops were recognized. The extrusive facies consist of breccia or massive lavas and little domes. The geochemistry reveals an arc-like calc-alkaline signature with a normal crust and trace-element patterns which suggest a similar source. Based on regional knowledge, three groups are proposed: Cerro Mocho dikes with Ti anomalies and higher Sm/Yb; extrusive facies of the Upper Cretaceous- Paleocene (Rivera Andesite); and the hypabyssal facies of thr Eocene (Colipilli Dikes). Finally, the occurrences of these rocks in this segment of the Andes indicate an important shift to the East of the Upper Cretaceous-Eocene volcanic arc that reveals its easternmost position.
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Vera, E.A.R. - Folguera, A. - Gímenez, M. - Martínez, P. - Ruiz, F. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;64(2):214-230
2009

Descripción: The Huecú basin is located at the central part of the large Loncopué retroarc trough. Its volcanic, volcaniclastic, lacustrine and fluvial filling is directly related to neotectonic activity in the area. The basaltic eruptions are reflecting different pulses associated with the development of extensional faults and tensional fractures. Geophysical potential methods have identified basement involvement in the extensional deformation that affected the Tertiary sequences of the area during the last 5 Mys. Neotectonic features in Quaternary volcanic sequences suggest the persistence of these subsidence mechanisms in the Huecú depocenter. These faults are directly connected to the basement segmentation identified by gravimetric and mag-netometric studies. The historical floods produced by the Agrio river damming, are related to fisural eruptions and demons-trate the high probability that retroarc volcanic eruptions may occur again. The recognition of flooded areas that are forming the youngest sedimentary levels in the Huecú depocenter shows potential areas of active retroarc spreading in the Neuquén area associated with neotectonic and seismic processes.
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Guzmán, C.G. - Cristallini, E.O. - García, V.H. - Yagupsky, D.L. - Bechis, F.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2011;68(4):542-554
2011

Temas:   Breakout -  Central andes -  Dikes -  Retroarc -  Stress -  basin evolution -  bitumen -  borehole -  dike -  Eocene

Descripción: Continuity and evolution in time of the horizontal stress direction in the Neuquen Basin area, derived from the analysis of recent borehole data and orientation of volcanic dykes measured in outcrop in the Cara Cura and Reyes Ranges is presented. The bitumen dykes along the Neuquén Basin were formed during Paleocene - Eocene in a context where the maximum stress was horizontal and had a NE. Within the analyzed volcanic dykes two major groups have been recognized, group i (NE orientation) and group ii (NNE orientation) and a secondary group iii (NW orientation). The age of these dykes is still not well established, but they were related to a Late Oligocene - Miocene magmatic event. Both for the volcanic and bitumen dykes a type i group (ENE-NE orientation) has been recognized, evidencing the maximum stress direction at the time they were formed. Beyond the uncertainties in the volcanic and bitumen dykes age, it is interpreted that during great part of Tertiary, the orientation of the horizontal maximum stress was NE. However, the breakout data shows that the actual horizontal maximum stress is a little different with a ENE mean direction. This change in the direction of stress is consistent with the change in the subduction vector produced between the Eocene and today.
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Piethé, R.D. - Palma, R.M.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2008;63(4):682-695
2008

Descripción: The study of the carbonate-ramp deposits of La Manga Formation has allowed us to recognize three facies associations. The lithofacies association A is composed by five lithofacies (A1-A5). This association represents part of the transgressive systems tract. It corresponds to external ramp deposits, accumulated below the storm-wave base. The A facies association appears in cycles of centimetric to decimetric thickness and belong to a retrograding parasequence set of 5th order. The lithofacies B association starts after an abrupt facies contact. It is characterized by six lithofacies (B1-B6). They are coarsening upward beds that form metric-scale cycles. These are interpreted as middle-ramp deposits dominated by storms. It corresponds to 4th order sequences. The lithofacies C includes three lithofacies (C1-C3). The small scale cycles were controlled by storm events, while the medium and large scale ones were likely originated by eustasy. The studied stratigraphic sections of La Manga Formation are included in two depostitional sequences SD-2 and SD-3. An abrupt discontinuity marks the beginning of the depositional sequence SD-2, which constitutes a transgressive system-tract, composed by a coarsening upward parasequence stacking set. Above a maximum flooding surface, manifested by a drastic change of facies, a low rate accommodation space period and a sea-level fall (characterized by a lowstand systems tract) are evidenced. The third depositional sequence SD-3 is composed by lagoon deposits. It starts after a paleokarstic surface, characterized by the development of a sheet-cake breccia and an intense vadose diagenesis.
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Rojas Vera, E.A. - Folguera, A. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;65(2):400-412
2009

Descripción: The Huecú depocenter is located in the central sector of the Loncopué trough in western Neuquén. This basin is composed of volcanic, volcaniclastic, fluvial and lacustrine deposits, younger than 1.6 Ma encompassing postglacial and even historical sediments and lavas. During most of its evolution, the Huecú depocenter has constituted a small closed depression (pullapart basin) restricted to the Loncopué trough, a major extensional retroarc basin in the Central and Patagonian Andes. This basin was fed from the north since the beginning of its evolution by a series of big amalgamated post-Pliocene stratovolcanoes located in the Mandolegüe Cordillera. The basin was also filled by fissural lava flows originated in the Agrio caldera located to the east grouped in the Escorial Basalt of 1.6 to 0.8 Ma. Polygenetic volcanic products form in the region big stratovolcanoes among which the Trolón and Colorado volcanic centers were the most prominent. These centers of Pleistocene age were highly eroded by the last glacial activity that affected the region. Nearly at the end of the glacial period two fissural volcanic fields covered the Huecú depocenter corresponding to the Rankül-Lom Basalt and preglacial Tres Hermanos basalts. Finally postglacial volcanic lavas covered most of the Huecú depocenter. These were grouped in the Cerro Artillería Basalts and postglacial Tres Hermanos basalt, which have recurrently dammed the main fluvial basins in the area. The fluvial and lacustrine deposits are represented by El Huecú and Mar Pequeño Formations.
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Rojas Vera, E. - Folguera, A. - Spagnuolo, M. - Gímenez, M. - Ruiz, F. - Martínez, P. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;65(1):204-214
2009

Descripción: The Chancho-Co hill is the main positive feature in the caldera del Agrio domain with the only exception of the Copahue volcano. Its development is lin- ked to a series of NE-trending thrusts with a general vergence to the SE, which affects Late Pliocene successions gathered in Las Mellizas Formation. The main topographic break in this fan of reverse faults coincides with the Copahue Fault. This structure uplifted Late Pliocene sequences over younger unconsolidated fluvial and coluvial deposits. The detailed study of these sequences allowed identifying at least two periods of activity for the Copahue Fault. This fault, as well as the other neigh- bor thrusts, cuts the Copahue lavas to the south showing the precise geometry of the Chanchó-Co uplift. Finally, the inver- sion of Paleogene depocenters at depth determined from gravimetric studies is proposed to explain the deeper geometry of the neotectonic structures in the area.
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González Díaz, E.F. - Folguera, A. - Costa, C.H. - Wright, E. - Ellisondo, M.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2006;61(2):197-217
2006

Descripción: Studies performed during the last five years have shown the existence of 74 prehistoric rock-avalanches in the northern Neuquén Andes (36°-38°S). These are mainly related to volcanic grounds of Pliocene to Pleistocene age corresponding to the Hualcupén Formation. In this work we describe their main characteristics and general homogeneous morphology. They are also characterized by a single tectonic control associated with the occurrence of their break-away and mainly postglacial ages, fact revealed by their systematic position into previous glacial valleys and limited radiometric ages. The obstruction produced by these features altered the shape of the valleys giving to local lakes. Eighteen percent of the cases are characterized by landslide dams preserved nowadays while only six percent by ephemeral ones. Two of the dams were actually catastrophically collapsed: the Cerro Pelán and Navarrete rock-avalanches: The former in Barrancas river valley with the consequent formation of the Carrilauquen lake and the later with the generation of Navarrete lake. The Carrilauquen's dam broke during historical times (29/12/1914) forming an outburst-flood that passed from the Barrancas valley to the Colorado river valley destroying their local economy and reaching after 1,500 km the Atlantic coast. The highest computed volumes in the entire region for the deposits related to rock-avalanches correspond to Varva Co Campos avalanche (3 km3). Cosmogenic isotopes have revealed its age and the age of the neighbor deposit of Varvar Co Tapia rock-avalanche, resulting in 30 ka and 60 ka respectively. Further cosmogenic isotope data revealed that the Cerro PeMn avalanche is only 2 ka. A wrong assumption, presently revaluated, was related to the assignment of these deposits to glacial accumulations because of their chaotic structure, their hummocky topography and the induced dams. Finally, several topographic, geomorphological and seismotectonic criteria are exposed to prove a seismic trigger for these avalanches. Graphics and one table are used to display the distribution of their deposits and its dose association with the orogenic front at these latitudes and the crustal seismicity of the region. © 2006 Asociación Geológica Argentina.
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Lazo, D.G. - Concheyro, G.A. - Ottone, E.G. - Guler, M.V. - Aguirre-Urreta, B.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2009;65(2):322-341
2009

Descripción: The Lower Cretaceous of the Neuquén Basin represents one of the most complete series in the Andes of South America. Highly fossiliferous exposures make correlation easy among different localities and allow to perform detailed studies of the fossil content. This paper presents, for the first time, an integrated biostratigraphic zonation for the Agrio Formation in its type section, based on ammonoids, bivalves, nannofossils and palynomorphs. A detailed section from base to top of the Agrio Formation was measured in the Bajada del Agrio region near the junction of Salado and Agrio Rivers in Central Neuquén. Our focus centred on the two marine members. In the field 39 ammonoid levels were identified and 74 samples of black and grey shales were collected to search calcareous nannofossils and palynomorphs. In addition, 41 Steinmanella Crickmay bearing levels and four levels containing Neocomiceramus curacoensis (Weaver) were identified. Four ammonoids zones, eight ammonoids subzones and two bivalve zones were recognized in the Pilmatué Member encompassing the late Valanginian to the early Hauterivian. Four ammonoids zones and two bivalve zones were recognized in the Agua de la Mula Member encompassing the late Hauterivian and reaching the basal Barremian. Another bivalve zone was identified in the Spitidiscus riccardii Zone, but left undefined due to unsolved taxonomy. The analyzed fossil groups have mainly tethyan affinities. Correlations to the European standard zonations are possible due to the presence of some index ammonoids, but also due to some nannofossil bioevents. Palynomorphs resulted not very useful in biostratigraphy. Continental palynomorphs have affinities to Gondwana while marine palynomorphs have clear tethyan affinities. Bivalves have proved locally useful in biostratigraphy, but index species are endemic to the basin and thus difficult to correlate to other regions or continents.
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Mpodozis, C. - Ramos, V.A.
Rev. Asoc. Geol. Argent. 2008;63(4):481-497
2008

Descripción: The Jurassic history of southern South America shows a complex geologic evolution which is the result of different processes that began along the western Gondwana margin during the initial stages of Pangea breakup. Andean subduction along the Pacific continental margin began in the Early Jurassic, after a period of continental-scale extension and rifting, which peaked by the end of the Triassic in central and northern Argentina and Chile. Renewal of subduction was the result of an episode of ocean growth along a series of spreading centers between North and South America when the separation of these continents began as a consequence of the activity of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province hotspot. Motion along these spreading centers produced a component of oblique, SE-directed subduction along the western margin of South America and the reactivation of inherited orthogonal structural features as the N70°E trending Huincul ridge in the Neuquén Basin that was uplifted during Jurassic times. Subduction along the north-south trending Argentine-Chilean continental margin acelerated during the break-up between West and East Gondwana soon after the opening of the Indian Ocean, linked to the Karoo hot-spot. Subduction took place under extensional conditions probably associated with a negative trench roll-back, leading to the formation of a magmatic arc along the Coast Ranges from southern Peru to central Chile and, to the east, the Arequipa, Tarapacá and Neuquén extensional back-arc basins. In northern Patagonia, early Jurassic arc related magmatism occurred to the east of the present day Andean Cordillera along the short-lived (190-170 Ma) Subcordilleran Batholith and the associated Liassic intra arc basin. Arc magmatism ceased in northern Patagonia at ca 170 Ma to be replaced by huge volumes of Early to Middle Jurassic rhyolites and dacites of the Chon-Aike Large Igneous province produced as a result of crustal melting in an overheated crust during the initial stages of Gondwana breakup. Early rifting during Middle-Late Jurassic times took place in the Cañadón Asfalto Basin and the Late Jurassic Río Guenguel, Río Mayo and Río Senguerr basins, orthogonal to the continental margin as a consequence of the Weddell Sea opening. Acid magmatism was associated with widespread extension and culminated in the opening of the ocean-floored Rocas Verdes Basin. The causes of the cessation of magmatism in the Subcordilleran Batholith, the origin of the Chon Aike LIP and the rotation of the magmatic front towards the Patagonian Batholith around 150 Ma are still not well understood. Hypothesis linking this mutating tectonic scenario to the collision of exotic terranes against the Pacific margin of Patagonia during the early to middle Jurassic should be taken into consideration.
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