Artículos de revistas
The relationship between carbonate facies, volcanic rocks and plant remains in a late Palaeozoic lacustrine system (San Ignacio Fm, Frontal Cordillera, San Juan province, Argentina)
Fecha
2013-03-01Registro en:
Busquest, P.; Méndez Bedia, Isabel; Gallastegui, Gloria; Colombo, F.; Cardó, R.; et al.; The relationship between carbonate facies, volcanic rocks and plant remains in a late Palaeozoic lacustrine system (San Ignacio Fm, Frontal Cordillera, San Juan province, Argentina); Springer; International Journal Of Earth Sciences; 102; 5; 1-3-2013; 1271-1287
1437-3254
Autor
Busquest, P.
Méndez Bedia, Isabel
Gallastegui, Gloria
Colombo, F.
Cardó, R.
Limarino, Carlos Oscar
Heredia, N.
Cesari, Silvia Nelida
Resumen
The San Ignacio Fm, a late Palaeozoic foreland basin succession that crops out in the Frontal Cordillera (Argentinean Andes), contains lacustrine microbial carbonates and volcanic rocks. Modification by extensive pedogenic processes contributed to the massive aspect of the calcareous beds. Most of the volcanic deposits in the San Ignacio Fm consist of pyroclastic rocks and resedimented volcaniclastic deposits. Less frequent lava flows produced during effusive eruptions led to the generation of tabular layers of fine-grained, greenish or grey andesites, trachytes and dacites. Pyroclastic flow deposits correspond mainly to welded ignimbrites made up of former glassy pyroclasts devitrified to microcrystalline groundmass, scarce crystals of euhedral plagioclase, quartz and K-feldspar, opaque minerals, aggregates of fine-grained phyllosilicates and fiammes defining a bedding-parallel foliation generated by welding or diagenetic compaction.