Title
Tectonic evolution and paleogeography of the Mesozoic Pucará Basin, central Peru
Date Issued
01 June 2007
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
The Pucará Basin of Peru is an elongate trough that subsided landward of a NNW-trending structural high during the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic. It formed as a postrift regional sag as the earlier Triassic fault-controlled Mitu rifts yoked together. The rift and transitional postrift basins were associated with a NW-striking sinistral shear zone that controlled isopachs and facies distributions and resulted in magmatism and mineralization along its trend. A distinct association of later dolomitization and MVT lead-zinc mineralization also occurs with these basin-forming shear zones. Although basaltic and andesitic extrusives are common, there is no evidence that the Pacific margin was a magmatic arc until the upper Pucará, and then only weakly developed in northern Peru. Except in the upper Pucará of northwest Peru, geochemical studies, including whole rock and trace element analyses, indicate that intercalations of volcanic material have intraplate rift affinities. The basin fill has a three-part stratigraphic subdivision, comprising lower and upper carbonate platforms with an intermediate phase of basin overdeepening and sediment starvation that resulted in a regional, organic-rich argillaceous drape. Stratigraphic accumulation was dominated by axial patterns of onlap and progradation, though facies characteristics show it was augmented by periodic flooding of the western basin margin high. Marine invertebrate fossils indicate normal marine salinities. The sedimentological interpretation is based on a SW-NE transect in the southern part of the Pucará Basin. The Chambará (Norian-Rhaetian) and Condorsinga (Toarcian) formations were constructed principally by shallow-water carbonate sedimentation in lagoon-like subtidal, intertidal, and supratidal paleoenvironments. The subtidal carbonate platform is dominated by oolitic grainstones with subordinate bioclastic packstones. Subordinate open-basin facies in the Chambará Formation consist principally of crinoidal packstones and bioclastic wackestones. In the intertidal and supratidal facies, evaporite pseudomorphs are common and generally associated with algal mats and widespread early diagenetic dolomitization. During the Chambará and Condorsinga, subsidence typically was balanced by carbonate production and shallow-water environments prevailed; the basin had the characteristics of an overfilled basin. Conversely, the intermediate late Rhaetian-Sinemurian stage of basin subsidence was marked by underfilled deep water conditions. This widespread transgressive inundation of the Pucará Basin, recorded in the argillaceous Aramachay stratigraphy, correlates with similar events in other Andean basins. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Start page
1
End page
24
Volume
24
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geoquímica, Geofísica
Geología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-34250172085
Source
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
ISSN of the container
08959811
Sponsor(s)
Comparing the facies trends of Malpaso and Tingocancha, it is apparent that marine flooding was from northwest to southeast. This interpretation is supported by the presence of deeper-water facies at the top of the Chambará succession at Malpaso, whereas peritidal facies persisted at Tingocancha. On the scale of the entire Pucará basin, we know that overall inundation progressed from northwest to southeast along the axis of a fault-controlled trough ( Figs. 1 and 6 ). Paleontological and sedimentological studies of exposures in the Utcubamba Valley of northern Peru show that the Aramachay deep-water facies are Rhaetian in age ( Prinz, 1985a ), whereas their counterparts in the southern part of the basin are Hettangian.
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