INVESTIGADORES
TASSONE Alejandro Alberto
artículos
Título:
The Cerro Guanaco mass movements: A geophysical and morphometric approach on a megalandslide in the Fuegian Andes (Southern Patagonia)
Autor/es:
BRAN, DONALDO MAURICIO; LOZANO, JORGE GABRIEL; WINOCUR, DIEGO; MENICHETTI, MARCO; ONNIS, LUCIANO; LODOLO, EMANUELE; TASSONE, ALEJANDRO
Revista:
JOURNAL OF SOUTH AMERICAN EARTH SCIENCES
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 101
ISSN:
0895-9811
Resumen:
The Fuegian Andes, inthe southernmost part of South America, arecharacterized by a relatively young deglacial landscape, wherethe glacialerosive relief isstronglyinfluenced byregional-scale geological structures, resulting in deep longitudinal valleys with steeply dipping hillslopes. The rock-slope stability response to receding ice masses and the contribution of the gravitational processes in landscape evolution of the southernmost Andes, however, have not been assessed so far. The remoteness of the region, comprising a mountainous area hardly to access and piedmont and valley floors densely covered by forest, peatbogs or water bodies might partly explain the lack of such studies. Therefore, the objective of this contribution is to document for the first time the occurrence of massive slope failures in the Fuegian Andes using a multidisciplinary approach. This involves the use of indirect methods such as applied geophysics and landscape morphometrics. The southwest-facing slope of CerroGuanaco,nearUshuaia,hostsseveralslopefailures,butamassivefailurestandsout.Themorphostructural approach allowed the geometrical description of the main dimensional characteristics of the first megalandslide recognized in the Fuegian Andes, which involved almost 1,2 km3 ofmaterial. On the otherhand, the geophysical data has proved valuable in estimating the depth and characteristic of the buried detachment surface. The slope failure consisted of an initial translational movement followed by secondary slides and was developed shortly after the glacier recession. The gravitational processes represent an important element in the Fuegian deglacial landscape evolution.