Abstract

The basement of the Central Andes located in central-western Argentina (31º20′S - 69º22′W) is composed by the Cuyania and Chilenia terranes which were amalgamated to Gondwana in the Early-Mid Paleozoic. Between the Precordillera (Cuyania) and Frontal Cordillera (Chilenia) there are exposures of marine metasedimentary rocks associated with mafic rocks with an E-MORB chemical signature that represent the remnants of an extensional basin developed between both terranes. The stratigraphic features and the distribution of the Early-Mid Paleozoic units along the Western Precordillera were constrained by remote sensing techniques. This allowed us to identify two stages in the evolution of the sedimentary in-fill of the marine basin: an initial stage (Mid-Late Ordovician) marked by widespread extensional tectonics and a finning-upwards sequence interbedded with volcanic-plutonic mafic rocks; and a Late Ordovician?-Devonian where the sedimentation was characterized by the development of coarsening-upwards sequences with low participation of mafic rocks. Flattened parallel folds associated with pre-Andean thrusts have locally a top-to-the SW vergence. These pre-Andean (Late Devonian) structures are the relics of the Chanic orogen whose double vergence is the result of the control exerted by previous structures related to the ordovician rifting. This is constrained by the residual and regional magnetic anomalies which reflect an important correlation between deep and surface structures. We propose the inception of a subduction zone with an eastward polarity on the proto-Pacific margin of Gondwana as the responsible for the compressive geotectonic framework that led to the closure of the Western Precordillera basin during the Late Devonian and the development of the Chanic thick-skinned-dominated orogen.

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