Low-grade metamorphism of Cambro-Ordovician successions in the Famatina belt, Southern-Central Andes: Burial-inversion history linked to the evolution of the proto-Andean Gondwana margin

  1. Gilda Collo 1
  2. Margarita Do Campo 3
  3. Fernando Nieto 2
  1. 1 Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Argentina
  2. 2 Universidad de Granada. España
  3. 3 Universidad de Buenos Aires. Argentina
Revue:
Andean geology: Formerly Revista geológica de Chile

ISSN: 0718-7106 0718-7092

Année de publication: 2011

Volumen: 38

Número: 2

Pages: 284-318

Type: Article

DOI: 10.5027/ANDGEOV38N2-A03 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAccès ouvert editor

D'autres publications dans: Andean geology: Formerly Revista geológica de Chile

Résumé

The metamorphic P-T conditions of low-grade units from the Famatina belt, Central Andes of Argentina, were estimated through petrography, X-ray diffraction, and electron microscopy. For the Middle-Upper Cambrian Negro Peinado Formation a tectono-metamorphic event associated with intense intrafoliar folding, with estimated temperatures between 290 and 400°C (KIcis: 0.16-0.27A°29, biotite blastesis and compositional homogeneity in dioctahedral micas) and intermediate pressure conditions (white mica b parameter: 9.010Á-9.035Á), was recognized. The Achavil Formation (Middle-Upper Cambrian) presents a main metamorphic event associated with temperatures between 200 and 290°C (KIcis: 0.26-0.41A°29) and intermediate- to low-pressure conditions (white mica b parameter values: 8.972Á-9.017Á). Some illitic substitution in dioctahedral micas also indicates lower metamorphic grade than the Negro Peinado Formation. For Upper Cambrian to Middle Ordovician sequences a burial metamorphic pattern, with a progressive decrease in metamorphic grade from Volcancito Formation to Cerro Morado Group (ca. 490-465 Ma; KIcis: 0.31-0.69A°29) and absence of tendency changes linked to strati-graphic discontinuities was proposed. Mica and chlorite are the main phyllosilicates in the oldest units, while Ilt/ Sme (R3) mixed-layer is almost the only one in the youngest. White mica b parameter indicates intermediate- to low-pressure conditions for all these sequences. This burial metamorphic pattern presents a marked break as the youngest Ordovician unit (La Aguadita Formation, after ca. 452 Ma) records higher metamorphic conditions (IKcis: 0.28-0.19A°29) than units from the Ordovician arc, with estimated temperatures between 270 and 330°C and intermediate-pressure conditions. Our results indicate that basin contraction and inversion processes related to the Ordovician Ocloyic Orogeny involved at least two well-discriminated and not superposed metamorphic episodes in this region.