Artículos de revistas
Neoproterozoic evolution of the basement of the South-American platform
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Journal of South American Earth Sciences, Oxford, v.47, p.72-89, 2013
10.1016/j.jsames.2013.04.005
Autor
Brito Neves, Benjamim Bley de
Fuck, Reinhardt A.
Institución
Resumen
Neoproterozoic geologic and geotectonic processes were of utmost importance in forming and structuring
the basement framework of the South-American platform. Two large domains with distinct
evolutionary histories are identified with respect to the Neoproterozoic era: the northwest-west
(Amazonian craton and surroundings) and the central-southeast (the extra-Amazonian domain).
In the first domain, Neoproterozoic events occurred only locally and were of secondary significance, and
the geologic events, processes, and structures of the pre-Neoproterozoic (and syn-Brasiliano) cratonic
block were much more influential. In the second, the extra-Amazonian domain, the final evolution,
structures and forms are assigned to events related to the development of a complex net of Neoproterozoic
mobile belts. These in turn resulted in strong reworking of the older pre-Neoproterozoic basement. In this
domain, four distinct structural provinces circumscribe or are separated by relatively small pre-
Neoproterozoic cratonic nuclei, namely the Pampean, Tocantins, Borborema and Mantiqueira provinces.
These extra-Amazonian provinces were formed by a complex framework of orogenic branching systems
following a diversified post-Mesoproterozoic paleogeographic scenario. This scenario included many types
of basement inliers as well as a diversified organization of accretionary and collisional orogens. The
basement inliers date from the Archean toMesoproterozoic periods and are different in nature. The escape
tectonics that operated during the final consolidation stages of the provinces were important to and
responsible for the final forms currently observed. These latest events, which occurred from the Late
Ediacaran to the Early Ordovician, present serious obstacles to paleogeographic reconstructions.
Two groups of orogenic collage systems are identified. The older system from the Tonian (>850 Ma)
period is of restricted occurrence and is not fully understood due to strong reworking subsequent to
Tonian times. The second group of orogenies is more extensive and more important. Its development
began with diachronic taphrogenic processes in the Early Cryogenian period (ca. 850e750 Ma) and
preceded a complex scenario of continental, transitional and oceanic basins. Subsequent orogenies (post
800 Ma) were also created by diachronic processes that ended in the Early Ordovician. More than one
orogeny (plate interaction) can be identified either in space or in time in every province. The orogenic
processes were not necessarily synchronous in different parts of the orogenic system, even within the
same province. This particular group of orogenic collage events is known as the “Brasiliano”.
All of the structural provinces of the extra-Amazonian domain exhibit final events that are marked by
extrusion processes, are represented by long lineaments, and are fundamental to unraveling the structural
history of the Phanerozoic sedimentary basins.