Collision and Cordilleran orogenesis: an Andean perspective
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Geological Society, London, Special Publications
- Vol. 19 (1) , 389-404
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsl.sp.1986.019.01.22
Abstract
Summary: The Andean Cordillera is the result of interaction between oceanic lithosphere, forming the floor of the Pacific Ocean Basin, and S American lithosphere during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Break up of Gondwanaland was accompanied by widespread extensional tectonics in its S American segment during the Early to Mid-Mesozoic. The trend, dimensions and nature of the resulting basins were to a considerable extent controlled by the structure of the pre-Jurassic basement. Elongate basins formed along virtually the length ( c . 7,500 km) of the Pacific margin from Northern Peru (5°S) to the Northern Scotia Ridge (56°S). These basins developed within, or immediately behind, a magmatic arc. Mid-Cretaceous uplift and compression, contemporaneous with the global increase in seafloor spreading rates, took place along the length of this Pacific margin composite back-arc trough. Horizontal shortening accompanied the uplift, but only S of lat. 50°S did extensive penetrative fabrics develop in the basin called the Magellan Geosyncline by Aubouin (1965) because of its partially ophiolitic floor (the ‘Rocas Verdes’) and infilling of deep-marine volcaniclastic turbidites. This Mid-Cretaceous event may have been critical in initiating the process of Cordilleran orogenesis. Subsequently part or all of the Late Cretaceous batholiths were intruded into the uplifted back-arc trough as the locus of magmatic activity moved eastwards to its present location and dominantly E-verging fold-and-thrust belts developed along the eastern flank of the Cordillera. Thus in the development of the present Andean Cordillera, S of 5°S, ‘collision’ was confined to the re-welding of a zone of failure between an ensialic magmatic arc and its parent continent. For the most part this involved little horizontal displacement and reflects, therefore, what might be described as ‘accordian tectonics’, a curtailed version of the Wilson cycle. Only in the very far S, in Tierra del Fuego and S Georgia, does crust appear to have been consumed in the arc-continent ‘collision’.This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Geochronology of Mesozoic-Cenozoic magmatism in central Chile, lat. 31°–36°SEarth-Science Reviews, 1982
- West Antarctica: Problem child of GondwanalandTectonics, 1982
- Igneous history of the Andean Cordillera and Patagonian plateau around latitude 46°SPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1981
- Ensialic spreading-subsidence in the Mesozoic and Palaeogene Andes of central ChileJournal of the Geological Society, 1981
- Flat-plate subduction and the Cape Fold Belt of South AfricaGeology, 1980
- Structural zones and continental collision, Central AlpsTectonophysics, 1978
- On the origin of compressional intraplate stresses in South AmericaPhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 1978
- Initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios of plutonic and volcanic rocks of the Central Andes between latitudes 26° and 29° southEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1975
- Burial metamorphic episodes in the Andean geosyncline, Central ChileInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1970
- Metamorphic facies series of the crystalline basement of ChileInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1970