Abstract

Southern Mexico is a key area for unraveling the tectonic evolution of North America because it contains the stratigraphic and structural record of the major tectonic events that shaped this continental mass, such as the breakup of Pangea and the growth of the North America Cordilleran Orogeny. However, multiple reactivations of faults and erosion of the stratigraphic record do not permit to adequately assess the timing of these tectonic events. Although most authors suggested that lithospheric extension and exhumation of continental blocks during Pangea breakup started in Mexico by Early Jurassic time, works published in the last decade provide an increasing number of thermo-tectonic evidence of an earlier phase of continental thinning. In this work, we present detrital apatite thermochronological and geochemical data (trace elements including rare earth elements) from fluvial deposits of the Tianguistengo formation, which is the oldest stratigraphic unit of the Otlaltepec Basin, a major basin in southern Mexico that has been linked to Pangea breakup. Our data show that at least a part of the Tianguistengo formation was derived from the adjacent Pennsylvanian–Cisuralian Totoltepec pluton. Apatite fission-track-based time–temperature modelling for unreset apatite populations suggests that the main exhumation of the Totoltepec pluton, which prompted the deposition of a part of the Tianguistengo formation, took place during Late Triassic time. Thus, our results suggest that Pangea breakup in southern Mexico started at least by Middle–Late Triassic time (240–230 Ma), as it is recorded in the Otlaltepec Basin.

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