TY - JOUR A1 - Zapata, Sebastian Henao A1 - Cardona, A. A1 - Jaramillo, J. S. A1 - Patino, A. A1 - Valencia, V. A1 - Leon, S. A1 - Mejia, D. A1 - Pardo-Trujillo, A. A1 - Castaneda, J. P. T1 - Cretaceous extensional and compressional tectonics in the Northwestern Andes, prior to the collision with the Caribbean oceanic plateau JF - Gondwana research : international geoscience journal ; official journal of the International Association for Gondwana Research N2 - The Cretaceous units exposed in the northwestern segment of the Colombian Andes preserve the record of extensional and compressional tectonics prior to the collision with Caribbean oceanic terranes. We integrated field, stratigraphic, sedimentary provenance, whole rock geochemistry, Nd isotopes and U-Pb zircon data to understand the Cretaceous tectonostratigraphic and magmatic record of the Colombian Andes. The results suggest that several sedimentary successions including the Abejorral Fm. were deposited on top of the continental basement in an Early Cretaceous backarc basin (150-100 Ma). Between 120 and 100 Ma, the appearance of basaltic and andesitic magmatism (similar to 115-100 Ma), basin deepening, and seafloor spreading were the result of advanced stages of backarc extension. A change to compressional tectonics took place during the Late Cretaceous (100-80 Ma). During this compressional phase, the extended blocks were reincorporated into the margin, closing the former Early Cretaceous backarc basin. Subsequently, a Late Cretaceous volcanic arc was built on the continental margin: as a result, the volcanic rocks of the Quebradagrande Complex were unconformably deposited on top of the faulted and folded rocks of the Abejorral Fm. Between the Late Cretaceous and the Paleocene (80-60 Ma), an arc-continent collision between the Caribbean oceanic plateau and the South-American continental margin deformed the rocks of the Quebradagrande Complex and shut-down the active volcanic arc. Our results suggest an Early Cretaceous extensional event followed by compressional tectonics prior to the collision with the Caribbean oceanic plateau. (C) 2019 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Northern Andes KW - Paleogeography KW - Cretaceous KW - Extension KW - Convergent margins KW - Provenance Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2018.10.008 SN - 1342-937X SN - 1878-0571 VL - 66 SP - 207 EP - 226 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - León, Santiago A1 - Cardona, Agustín A1 - Mejia Velez, Dany A1 - Botello, G. E. A1 - Villa, Víctor A1 - Collo, Gilda A1 - Valencia, Victor A. A1 - Zapata, Sebastian Henao A1 - Avellaneda-Jimenez, D. S. T1 - Source area evolution and thermal record of an Early Cretaceous back-arc basin along the northwesternmost Colombian Andes JF - Journal of South American earth sciences N2 - Identifying the provenance signature and geodynamic setting on which sedimentary basins at convergent margins grow is challenging since they result from coupled erosional and tectonic processes, which shape the evolution of source areas and the stress regime. The Early Cretaceous evolution of the northern Andes of Colombia is characterized by extensional tectonics and the subsequent formation of a marginal basin. The Abejorral Formation and coeval volcano-sedimentary rocks are exposed along the western flank and axis of the Central Cordillera. They comprise an Early Cretaceous transgressive sequence initially accumulated in fluvial deltaic environments, which switched towards a deep-marine setting, and are interpreted as the infilling record of a marginal back-arc basin. Available provenance data suggest that Permian-Triassic metamorphic and less abundant Jurassic magmatic rocks forming the basement of the Central Cordillera sourced the Abejorral Formation. New detailed volcanic and metamorphic lithics analyses, conventional and varietal study of heavy minerals, detrital rutile mineral chemistry, allowed us to document changes in the source areas defined by the progressive appearance of both higher-grade and more distal low-grade metamorphic sources, which switched from pelitic to dominantly mafic in composition. Crystallochemical indexes of clay minerals of fine-grained rocks of the Abejorral Formation suggest that samples located close to the Romeral Fault System show characteristics of low-medium P-T low-grade metamorphism, whereas rocks located farther to the northeast preserve primary diagenetic features, which suggest a high heat-flow accumulation setting. We interpret that the Abejorral Formation records the progressive unroofing of the Central Cordillera basement that was being rapidly exhumed, as well as the incorporation of distal subduction-related metamorphic complexes to the west in response either to the widening of extensional front or the reactivation of fault structures on the oceanward margin of the basin. Although the deformational record of the Abejorral Formation would have resulted from over-imposed episodes, our new geochronological constraints suggest that this sedimentary sequence must have been deformed before the Paleocene due to the presence of arc-related intrusive non-deformed magmatic rocks with a crystallization age of ca. 60 Ma. KW - Back-arc basin KW - Northern Andes KW - Early cretaceous KW - Provenance KW - Clay mineralogy KW - Rutile mineral chemistry Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2019.102229 SN - 0895-9811 VL - 94 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER -