CICTERRA   20351
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Glaciomarine sequence stratigraphy in the Mississippian Río Blanco Basin, Argentina, southwestern Gondwana. Basin analysis and palaeoclimatic implications for the Late Paleozoic Ice Age during the Tournaisian.
Autor/es:
EZPELETA, MIGUEL; DÁVILA, FEDERICO MIGUEL; STERREN, ANDREA FABIANA; BASEI, MIGUEL; RUSTÁN, JUAN JOSÉ; DAHLQUIST, JUAN ANDRÉS; PRESTIANNI, CYRILLE; BALSEIRO, DIEGO; VACCARI, NORBERTO EMILIO; CISTERNA, GABRIELA ADRIANA
Revista:
GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SPECIAL PUBLICATION
Editorial:
GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SPECIAL PUBLICATION
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 177 p. 1107 - 1128
ISSN:
0305-8719
Resumen:
The Late Paleozoic Ice Age (LPIA) has been well recorded in the uppermost Mississippian?Pennsylvanian of Gondwana. Nevertheless, little is known about the temporal and geographic dynamics, particularly during the early Mississippian. We report on exceptional Tournaisian glaciomarine stratigraphic sections from central Argentina (Río Blanco Basin). Encompassing c. 1400 m, these successions contain conspicuous glacigenic strata with age constraints provided bypalaeontological data and U/Pb detrital zircon age spectra. A variety of marine, glaciomarine and fan-deltaic environments indicate relative sea-level variations mainly associated with tectonism and repetitive cycles of glacial activity. Provenance analysis indicates a source from the Sierras Pampeanas basement located to the east. Fifteen sequences were grouped into threedepositional models: (1) Transgressive Systems Tracts (TST) to Highstand Systems Tracts (HST) sequences unaffected by glacial ice; (2) Lowstand Systems Tracts (LST) to TST and then to HST with glacial influence; and (3) non-glacial Falling-Stage Systems Tracts (FSST) to TST and HST. The glacial evidence indicates that the oldest Mississippian glacial stage of the LPIA in southwestern Gondwana is constrained to the middle Tournaisian. In contrast with previous descriptions of Gondwanan coeval glacial records, our sequence analysis confirms complex hierarchical climate variability, rather than a single episode of ice advance and retreat.