Abstract
AbstractMost authors suggest that the main contraction phases in the southern Central Andes started in the Late Miocene. Along the flat‐slab segment, deformation has progressively involved basement and a broken foreland has developed. Recent work suggests that construction of the Andes by late Neogene shortening may have been controlled by lithospheric thinning and crustal structure generated during mid‐Tertiary times in the Southern and Central Andes. Exposures at the eastern border of the Famatina Ranges in western Argentina in the flat‐slab segment document basement involved extension of approximately this age. The Del Abra Formation, the lower unit of a major Andean synorogenic cycle (Angulos Group), reveals a distinct and previously unrecognized early Middle Miocene tectonic event. This is suggested by a 505‐m‐thick thinning‐ and fining‐upward megasequence. Dominantly conglomeratic facies record a continuous progression from fault‐scarp‐related high‐gradient colluvium to relatively distal terminal‐fan facies. The fining–thinning upward megasequence characterizes progressive scarp backstepping and decreasing relief after active extension. Interpretation of the stratigraphic fill and the associated structure (high‐angle hinterland‐dipping fault) favours tectonic inversion of an originally normal fault. This allows reappraisal and new understanding of the early‐stage architecture of the Central Andean foreland. Early Middle Miocene extension may have had an important bearing on the later evolution of the broken foreland.
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