Abstract

This study investigates the provenance of middle-late Miocene to Pliocene sediments of the Solimões Formation, in western Brazilian Amazonia, to complement the geological history and fill the gap left by similar studies on other foreland basin deposits and in the Amazonian fan. The major and trace element concentrations and Sr–Nd isotopic compositions of sixteen samples from the 1AS 33AM borehole and fifteen samples from two sections outcropping in the Acre and Yaco rivers were measured for determining their provenance. Additionally, the heavy mineral assemblages of the sixteen borehole samples were determined to complement the geochemical provenance interpretation of the borehole sediments. The Nd isotopic compositions of the Solimões Formation indicate that the Andes was the principal source of these Neogene sediments. While the middle-late Miocene borehole sediments are dominated by stable assemblage (zircon, tourmaline, and rutile) and less radiogenic Nd isotopic values, the Pliocene borehole sediments have a larger amount of more unstable mineral assemblages (epidote, pyroxene, and amphibole) and more radiogenic Nd isotopic values. These mineral and isotopic differences between the middle-late Miocene and Pliocene sediments are interpreted to reflect a change in provenance with increasing contribution of metamorphic and young Nd radiogenic source in the Pliocene most probably related to the late Miocene uplift of the Peruvian Eastern Cordillera. These changes that precede the paleoenvironmental changes highlighted by the palynological study of Leite et al. (2017) suggest that the Andean tectonics drove the middle to late Miocene paleoenvironmental changes of the Amazon basin from the Pebas mega-wetland to the more fluvial Acre phase.

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