Ordovician K-bentonites in the Argentine Precordillera: relations to Gondwana margin evolution
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Geological Society, London, Special Publications
- Vol. 142 (1) , 107-126
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsl.sp.1998.142.01.06
Abstract
Ordovician K-bentonites have now been recorded from >20 localities in the vicinity of the Argentine Precordillera. Most occur in the eastern thrust belts, in the San Juan Limestone and the overlying the Gualcamayo Formation, but a few ash beds are known also from the central thrust belts. The oldest occur in the middle ArenigI. victoriae lunatusgraptolite (Oe. evaeconodont) Zone, and the youngest in the middle LlanvirnP. elegans(P. suecicus) Zone. Mineralogical characteristics, typical of other Ordovician K-bentonites, include a matrix of illite/smectite mixed-layer clay and a typical felsic volcanic phenocryst assemblage: biotite, beta-form quartz, alkali and plagioclase feldspar, apatite, and zircon, with lesser amounts of hornblende, clinopyroxene, titanite and Fe-Ti oxides. The proportions of the mineral phases and variations in their crystal chemistry are commonly unique to individual (or small groups of) K-bentonite beds. Glass melt inclusions preserved in quartz are rhyolitic in composition. The sequence is unique in its abundance of K-bentonite beds, but a close association between the Precordillera and other Ordovician sedimentary basins cannot be established. The ash distribution is most consistent with palaeogeographical reconstructions in which early Ordovician drifting of the Precordillera occurred in proximity to one or more volcanic arcs, and with eventual collision along the Andean margin of Gondwana during the mid-Ordovician Ocloyic event of the Famatinian orogeny. The Puna-Famatina terrane northeast of the Precordillera might have served as the source of the K-bentonite ashes, possibly in concert with active arc magmatism on the Gondwana plate itself.This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural evolution of the Argentine precordillera: the Rio San Juan sectionPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Ordovician paleogeography and the evolution of the Iapetus oceanGeology, 1997
- Paleomagnetic evidence of an early Paleozoic rotated terrane in northwest Argentina: A clue for Gondwana-Laurentia interaction?Geology, 1996
- Quantification of pre-eruptive exsolved gas contents in silicic magmasNature, 1995
- Did the Taconic Appalachians continue into southern South America?Geology, 1992
- Early Paleozoic orogenic belt of the Andes in southwestern South America: Result of Laurentia-Gondwana collision?Geology, 1992
- Metabentonites in the Moffat Shale Group, Southern Uplands of Scotland: Geochemical evidence of ensialic marginal basin volcanismGeological Magazine, 1990
- Plinian and co-ignimbrite tephra fall from theBulletin of Volcanology, 1989
- Paleozoic terranes of the central Argentine‐Chilean AndesTectonics, 1986
- An Early Ordovician Sinkhole Deposit of Volcanic Ash and Fossiliferous Sediments in East TennesseeThe Journal of Geology, 1944