Abstract

We present new palaeontological and stratigraphic data from a poorly known section located in the Tontal Range, Argentina, whose importance is key to defining the character of a hypothetical Carboniferous mountain chain, the Protoprecordillera. The Tontal Range composed the core of the hypothetical Protoprecordillera, also called the Tontal arch. The section described here comprises Mississippian and Pennsylvanian marine and mixed marine–terrestrial units that were deposited within a proglacial (non-fjord) environment. A new correlating scheme of Tontal section units is brought based on new biostratigraphic data plus the recent development of a stratigraphic order of Carboniferous units cropping out only 15 km away. The lowermost unit in the Tontal section is Del Ratón Formation conglomerate, which passes upwards into glaciomarine shales correlated with the El Planchón Formation that bears marine bivalves and palynomorphs suggesting a Serpukhovian (Upper Mississippian) age. El Planchón is overlain by the barren Churupatí Formation, with lower units of shallow marine, fan-deltaic conglomerate, passing to fluvial redbeds. The overlying Del Salto Formation has intense intraformational folding due to slumping at its base, and consists of sandstone, organic-rich shale, and shelf carbonate, the latter containing marine invertebrates and palynomorphs that suggest a Bashkirian (Lower Pennsylvanian) age. The Tontal section represents a marginal position within a previously defined strike-slip basin (Milana and Di Pasquo, 2019) that was active during most of the Carboniferous. It was deposited in a shallow marine shelf beside a hummocky coastal landscape, the erosion of which provided rounded gravels deposited in Gilbert-type deltas with associated slumps. We found no indication this area hosted any kind of glaciers, and most of the time it was below sea level. These observations, along with the lack of any mountain-side complex or any alpine-valley glacio-related depositional features remain at this, or any neighbouring sections; suggest that there was no Protoprecordillera mountain chain. Correlation with nearby sections also suggests this margin was not influenced by any prominent topographic highs during the depositional time of the Tontal section (upper Mississipian to Pennsylvanian), but rather that this area was located near sea level, potentially with emergent and positive areas along both margins of the strike-slip basin that allowed preservation of the oldest Carboniferous units of this region. On the other hand, the tendency for generalised subsidence during the Upper Carboniferous over most of the Precordillera, may respond to the development of a volcanic arc westwards over the present Cordillera, associated with the activation of a subduction zone in the present-day Chile, turning most of the area into retroarc basins.

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