info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Structure of the wedge-top and foredeep of the Magallanes-Malvinas basins between 62° W and 67° W (SW Atlantic Ocean)
Fecha
2019-08Registro en:
Ormazabal, Juan Pablo; Tassone, Alejandro Alberto; Esteban, Federico Damián; Isola, José Ignacio; Cayo, Lubin Eric; et al.; Structure of the wedge-top and foredeep of the Magallanes-Malvinas basins between 62° W and 67° W (SW Atlantic Ocean); Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal of South American Earth Sciences; 93; 8-2019; 364-381
0895-9811
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ormazabal, Juan Pablo
Tassone, Alejandro Alberto
Esteban, Federico Damián
Isola, José Ignacio
Cayo, Lubin Eric
Lozano, Jorge Gabriel
Menichetti, Marco
Lodolo, Emanuele
Resumen
This work analyzes the geometry and geodynamic development of the offshore sector (between 62° W and 67° W) of the south Magallanes and Malvinas basins wedge-top and foredeep, and associated orogenic wedge. It is based on the interpretation of more than 20,000 km of multichannel seismic profiles, along with bathymetric data. The fold-and-thrust belt front was mapped, and three structural domains were distinguished: western, transitional and eastern. A stepped foredeep characterizes the western domain with flower-structures that affect the basement, and by an intense erosion in the Miocene deposits. Towards the transitional domain, the erosion is less evident, and the wedge-top is more developed. This configuration is associated with the syn-deformational deposition and the generation of thrusts within an acoustically chaotic body in the transitional and eastern domains, deposited by processes of mass removal in the Oligocene. During the Oligocene/Miocene, the area was affected by compression/transpression, which generated an incipient tectonic inversion of the basement extensional faults, with the formation of anticlines associated with piggy-back basins in the wedge-top. The differences observed between the western and eastern domains would be related to the differential movement between the crustal blocks of Tierra del Fuego and Burdwood Bank, respectively, against the South American shelf since the Oligocene.