INGEOSUR   20376
INSTITUTO GEOLOGICO DEL SUR
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Basement-cover interaction in the mountain front of the Northern Neuquén fold and thrust belt (37°10' - 37°40' S), Argentina
Autor/es:
TURIENZO, MARTÍN; PERALTA, FLORENCIA; DIMIERI, LUIS; SÁNCHEZ, NATALIA; ARAUJO, VANESA; LEBINSON, FERNANDO; IRASTORZA, AINARA
Revista:
JOURNAL OF SOUTH AMERICAN EARTH SCIENCES
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 100
ISSN:
0895-9811
Resumen:
The deformation front of the Neuquén fold and thrust belt (~37°30′S) comprises kilometer-scale basement involved anticlines, related to development of the Las Yeseras and Pampa Tril thrust systems, connected with a wide frontal syncline. The interpretation of more than 70 seismic lines led to the construction of a time-structure map at top of the Cuyo Group (Middle Jurassic), which shows a structural high east of the Tromen volcano produced by the superposition of thick-skinned structures. Moreover, data from 35 oil wells constrain the alongstrike variations in structural reliefs. The structural relief of the Las Yeseras anticline increase from north to south, between ~1000 m and 2000 m, while the structural relief of the Pampa Tril anticline reaches its maximumheight of 3700 m in the north and decreases southwards to only 1600 m height and then disappears. Three structural cross-sections based on surface and subsurface information show the overall structural style dominated by north-trending basement-involved anticlines, with subhorizontal backlimbs and maximum structural reliefs around 3?4 km, associated with thick-skinned thrust systems and without significant participation of inverted normal faults. Calculated thick-skinned shortenings are ~8.3 km (14.8%) in the north and ~4 km (7.8%) in the south, which principally reflects the decreasing displacement of the Pampa Tril thrust system. Along-strike structural changes were locally controlled by WNW transfer zones that can be interpreted as SSW-dipping preexisting normal faults with minor positive inversion. Thin-skinned structures that form oil fields at depth are genetically associated with the thick-skinned thrust systems, thus the understanding of basement-cover interaction in the mountain fronts will aid to future hydrocarbon explorations and to comprehend the mechanisms of Andean mountain building.