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Transition from collisional to subduction-related regimes

  • A geological transect across the suture separating northwestern South America from the Panama Arc helps document the provenance and thermal history of both crustal domains and the suture zone. During middle Miocene, strata were being accumulated over the suture zone between the Panama Arc and the continental margin. Integrated provenance analyses of those middle Miocene strata show the presence of mixed sources that includes material derived from the two major crustal domains: the old northwestern South American orogens and the younger Panama Arc. Coeval moderately rapid exhumation of Upper Cretaceous to Paleogene sediments forming the reference continental margin is suggested from our inverse thermal modeling. Strata within the suture zone are intruded by similar to 12 Ma magmatic arc-related plutons, marking the transition from a collisional orogen to a subduction-related one. Renewed late Miocene to Pliocene acceleration of the exhumation rates is the consequence of a second tectonic pulse, which is likely to be triggered by theA geological transect across the suture separating northwestern South America from the Panama Arc helps document the provenance and thermal history of both crustal domains and the suture zone. During middle Miocene, strata were being accumulated over the suture zone between the Panama Arc and the continental margin. Integrated provenance analyses of those middle Miocene strata show the presence of mixed sources that includes material derived from the two major crustal domains: the old northwestern South American orogens and the younger Panama Arc. Coeval moderately rapid exhumation of Upper Cretaceous to Paleogene sediments forming the reference continental margin is suggested from our inverse thermal modeling. Strata within the suture zone are intruded by similar to 12 Ma magmatic arc-related plutons, marking the transition from a collisional orogen to a subduction-related one. Renewed late Miocene to Pliocene acceleration of the exhumation rates is the consequence of a second tectonic pulse, which is likely to be triggered by the onset of a flat-slab subduction of the Nazca plate underneath the northernmost Andes of Colombia, suggesting that late Miocene to Pliocene orogeny in the Northern Andes is controlled by at least two different tectonic mechanisms.zeige mehrzeige weniger

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Metadaten
Verfasserangaben:Santiago LeonORCiD, Agustin Cardona, Mauricio ParraORCiD, Edward SobelORCiDGND, Juan S. JaramilloORCiD, Johannes GlodnyORCiD, Victor A. ValenciaORCiD, David ChewORCiD, Camilo MontesORCiD, Gustavo PosadaORCiD, Gaspar MonsalveORCiD, Andres Pardo-Trujillo
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/2017TC004785
ISSN:0278-7407
ISSN:1944-9194
Titel des übergeordneten Werks (Englisch):Tectonics
Untertitel (Deutsch):an example from neogene Panama-Nazca-South america interactions
Verlag:American Geophysical Union
Verlagsort:Washington
Publikationstyp:Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Sprache:Englisch
Datum der Erstveröffentlichung:22.12.2017
Erscheinungsjahr:2018
Datum der Freischaltung:14.03.2022
Band:37
Ausgabe:1
Seitenanzahl:21
Erste Seite:119
Letzte Seite:139
Fördernde Institution:Fundacion para la Promocion de la Investigacion y la Tecnologia (FPIT) [3.809]; Asociacion Colombiana de Geologos y Geofisicos del Petroleo (ACGGP); Corporacion Geologica Ares (Project "Paleogene Accretion-Deformation in Western Colombia: Implications in South-American Continental Growth and Andean Orogeny"); CAPESCAPES; FAPESPFundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [2013/03265-5]; Colombian science foundation COLCIENCIAS [50491, 51686]
Organisationseinheiten:Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Geowissenschaften
DDC-Klassifikation:5 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik / 55 Geowissenschaften, Geologie / 550 Geowissenschaften
Peer Review:Referiert
Publikationsweg:Open Access / Bronze Open-Access
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