Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/666
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Bahlburg, Heinrich
Carlotto Caillaux, Víctor Santiago
Cárdenas Roque, José Dionicio
Altiplano
Cordillera Oriental
Cusco
Puno
Umachiri
Perú
Ordovícico
2017-10-25T21:22:46Z
2017-10-25T21:22:46Z
2006-11
Bahlburg, H.; Carlotto, V. S. & Cárdenas, J. D. (2006) - Evidence of Early to Middle Ordivician arc volcanism in the Cordillera Oriental and Altiplano of southern Peru, Ollantaytambo Formation and Umachiri beds. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 22(1-2): 52-65. Doi: 10.1016/j.jsames.2006.09.001
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/666
pp. 52-65
Volcanic rocks of intermediate to predominantly mafic composition are exposed in the Cordillera Oriental and Altiplano of southern Peru in two localities: (1) the Ollantaytambo Formation, which crops out near Cusco, and (2) the Umachiri beds in the Departamento de Puno. The most notable unit in the Ollantaytambo Formation is an approximately 100 m thick succession of lapilli tuffs that originated by hydroclastic fragmentation. These volcanic rocks are of calc-alkaline basaltic to andesitic composition. The tuffs are overlain by fine-grained volcaniclastic sandstones and shales, which grade into quartz-rich turbidites. The Umachiri beds consist of monomict lapilli tuffs with varying lapilli abundance and size, formed by hydroclastic fragmentation, and volcaniclastic sandstones. The rocks have a uniform basaltic andesite composition and tholeiitic affinity. Chondrite-normalized element patterns of both volcanigenic units show a moderate enrichment of LREE and a weak negative Eu anomaly. Pronounced negative Nb and Ta anomalies indicate magma evolution in an arc environment. In contrast, the overlying epiclastic sandstones and shales in the Ollantaytambo Formation reflect upper crustal sources. Our data indicate that the deposition of the lapilli tuffs of the Ollantaytambo Formation and Umachiri beds likely was connected to the westward-lying Ordovician magmatic arc on the Arequipa Massif. If the Ordovician active margin in southern Peru had the same east-dipping subduction polarity as the active Gondwana margin in Argentina and Chile, the sedimentary basin in which the Ollantaytambo Formation and Umachiri beds were deposited was in a backarc position.
application/pdf
eng
Elsevier
urn:issn:0895-9811
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
Instituto Geológico, Minero y Metalúrgico – INGEMMET
Repositorio Institucional INGEMMET
Geoquímica
Petrografía
Rocas volcánicas
Tectónica
Volcanismo
Formación Ollantaytambo
Evidence of Early to Middle Ordovician arc volcanism in the Cordillera Oriental and Altiplano of southern Peru, Ollantaytambo Formation and Umachiri beds
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Geología
NL
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2006.09.001
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Peer reviewed
Journal of South American Earth Sciences, v. 22, n. 1-2, 2006

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