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Tectonophysics
j o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w. e l s ev i e r. c o m / l o c a t e / t e c t o

Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case


study from the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes
Laura Giambiagi a,⁎, Florencia Bechis a, Víctor García b, Alan H. Clark c
a
Instituto Argentino de Nivología, Glaciología y Ciencias Ambientales — CCT-CONICET, Parque San Martín s/n, Mendoza, 5500, CC 330, Argentina
b
Laboratorio de Modelado Geológico (LaMoGe), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Pabellón II, Ciudad Universitaria, Capital Federal, 1428, Argentina
c
Department of Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6

A R T I C L E I N F O A B S T R A C T

Article history: In this paper we analyse two end-member models of temporal and spatial interactions between thick- and
Received 5 June 2006 thin-skinned structures in a thrust front with pre-existing rift structures. In the most commonly accepted
Received in revised form 21 December 2006 model, a hinterland-to-foreland sequence of inversion of pre-existing normal faults is proposed. As a result,
Accepted 15 November 2007
the emplacement of shallow thrust sheets in the sedimentary cover occurs before the basement inversion in
Available online xxxx
the foreland. In the other model, basin inversion occurs early in the deformation history of the external part
Keywords:
of a fold-and-thrust belt, as the result of a foreland-to-hinterland sequence of inversion.
Southern Central Andes The Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt (34–36°S) formed in response to compression of the Mesozoic Neuquén
Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt basin during Neogene to Pleistocene times. Integrating detailed structural data from the northern part of this
Thick- and thin-skinned tectonics belt with new Ar/Ar dating, we propose a revised kinematic model of thick- and thin-skinned interaction and
Inversion and thrusting define the temporal-spatial evolution of the belt. Comparison of the timing of deformation in the thick- and
Simultaneous thrusting thin-skinned areas strongly supports the hypothesis that the reactivation of normal faults was coeval with
the insertion of shallow detachments and low-angle thrusting along the migrating front of the thrust belt
and occurred from the foreland to the hinterland. Detachments occur at several stratigraphic horizons,
including a deep basement decóllement related to the basement-involved thrusting and shallow detachments
located within the Jurassic and Cretaceous beds. These shallow and deep detachments were coeval producing
simultaneous development of thrusts during the complex deformation of the thrust front between 15 and
8 Ma.
© 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

1. Introduction Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt (Malargüe FTB) involving the Mesozoic


rift sequences of the Atuel depocentre. The Malargüe FTB has been
Many thrust belts are combinations of both thin- and thick- classically identified as a hybrid fold-and-thrust belt with basement
skinned thrustings as a result of reactivation of pre-existing thrust sheets transferring shortening to the Meso-Cenozoic sedimen-
anisotropies and weakness zones in the upper crust. The presence of tary cover (Kozlowski et al., 1993; Manceda and Figueroa, 1995; Rojas
pre-existing rift structures widely exerts an important control on et al., 1999; Zapata et al., 1999; Silvestro and Kraemer, 2005). This
thrust-belt geometry and evolution. However, the extent to which study establishes the kinematics of thin- and thick-skinned interac-
these anisotropies control regional patterns and the kinematics of tion and hence defines the temporal-spatial evolution of the northern
deformation in a subsequently developed fold-and-thrust belt is Malargüe FTB. We present the results of newly acquired field
controversial. The manner in which thin and thick-skinned related observations, integrated with subsurface data acquired from oil
structures interact in time remains poorly constrained. This paper exploration. A new kinematic model, which integrates the structural
sheds some light on these topics by analysing the kinematic evolution data and new Ar/Ar geochronology with previous surface data and Ar/
of the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt of the Southern Central Andes. Ar dating, is proposed for the thrust front of the northern part of the
The Andes of Argentina and Chile between latitudes 33° and 36° S belt. A chronological study of the deformation has been used to test
are superimposed to the Triassic–Jurassic Neuquén basin. The north- how thin- and thick-skinned deformational zones interact. Attention
ern part of this extensional trough comprises a series of NNW- has been paid to the timing of basement fault reactivation and coeval
trending depocentres (Fig. 1). At the latitude of the study area, the activation of a shallow detachment in the foreland. From these
Neogene geology of the Cordillera Principal is dominated by the observations we address the wider questions of the geometric
evolution and kinematics of fold-and-thrust belts and the role of
⁎ Corresponding author. Fax: +54 261 5244201.
extensional structures in generating variable deformational styles.
E-mail addresses: lgiambia@lab.cricyt.edu.ar (L. Giambiagi), Thus, does tectonic inversion of normal faults precede thin-skinned
fbechis@lab.cricyt.edu.ar (F. Bechis), victorg@gl.fcen.uba.ar (V. García). deformation of the sedimentary sequence in the foreland, or does

0040-1951/$ – see front matter © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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Fig. 1. Regional location map and morphostructural map of the Andes between 32° and 36° S. The location of the Malargüe fold and thrust belt, the northernmost sector of the
Neuquén Basin, and the Atuel depocentre in the present-day Cordillera Principal are highlighted. The box indicates the location of the study-area and Fig. 2.

basement inversion occur out-of-sequence after the emplacement of Legarreta and Uliana, 1991). Marine and continental sediments were
shallow thrust sheets. Our research demonstrates that in the northern deposited in isolated depressions during the Late Triassic to Early
part of the Malargüe FTB, deformation began with inversion of the rift Jurassic and are presently exposed in the Cordillera Principal
master fault, in the foreland, and subsequently migrated to the (Gulisano, 1981; Uliana and Biddle, 1988; Legarreta and Gulisano,
hinterland with the simultaneous development of inverted high-angle 1989). One example of these troughs is the Atuel depocentre, where
faults, thrust faults and basement short-cut and by-pass faults. the northern part of the Malargüe FTB was developed (Fig. 1).
By the end of the Early Cretaceous, a major plate tectonic
2. Tectonic setting reorganization took place (Somoza, 1998), ending the development
of the marine intra-arc and back-arc basins (Mpodozis and Ramos,
The tectonic setting and evolution of southern South America is 1989). Compressive tectonics along the western margin of southern
controlled by the subduction regime at the western margin of the South America began in the late Early Cretaceous (Mpodozis and
South American plate and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge spreading rates Ramos, 1989; Cobbold and Rosello, 2003; Zapata and Folguera, 2005).
along its eastern margin (Uliana and Biddle, 1988). During the There is, however, no evidence of this early compression in the study
Mesozoic, the western margin was the site of an active trench, a area, probably reflecting its eastern position. At the study latitude,
relatively narrow magmatic arc and a series of back-arc extensional convergence was oblique during the Paleogene but became progres-
basins (Charrier, 1979; Uliana and Biddle, 1988; Legarreta and Uliana, sively more perpendicular to the trench during the Neogene with a
1991). The most important of these basins was the Neuquén basin, concomitant increase in convergence rate (Pardo Casas and Molnar,
which comprised several NNW-elongated depocentres implanted on 1987; Somoza, 1998).
pre-Jurassic continental crust (Vergani et al., 1995). It was initiated as a The main components of the tectonic setting of the region are a
rift basin in the Late Triassic, when Chilean and central western magmatic arc along the Argentina–Chile border and a fold-and-
Argentina underwent extensional tectonism (Digregorio et al., 1984; thrust belt, which goes from the Cordillera Principal (Malargüe FTB)

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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to a series of uplifted basement blocks in the Cordillera Frontal. The is underlain by Proterozoic to Paleozoic metamorphic and plutonic
Malargüe FTB extends from 34° to 36°S and has developed since rocks of the Cordillera Frontal uplifted by high-angle faults along its
Miocene times in a thick-skinned style related to tectonic inversion eastern flank. The southern part of this range is uplifted by the
of Mesozoic rift structures (Kozlowski, 1984; Manceda and Figueroa, Carrizalito fault which dies out alongside a SW-plunging anticline
1995). Deformation involves pre-Jurassic basement rocks and south of the Río Diamante (Fig. 2) (Kozlowski, 1984; Turienzo and
Mesozoic rift and back-arc basin deposits. The Cordillera Principal Dimieri, 2005).

Fig. 2. Simplified geological map of the Malargüe FTB, between 34°30′ and 35°00′S, showing major structural features and location of cross section in Fig. 11. The area has been divided
into two sectors: an eastern sector where the Upper Triassic to Upper Jurassic rocks crop out, and a western sector where the Lower Cretaceous to Neogene rocks crop out. Only the
major faults have been drawn. Boxes indicate location of Figs 5 and 6. Based on Kozlowski et al. (1981), Cruz et al. (1991), Scaricabarozzi (2003), Kim et al. (2005), Turienzo and Dimieri
(2005), Giambiagi et al. (2005a,b), Bechis et al. (2005), Giambiagi et al. (2008). D2, D3, D6, D8, D9, D10, D12, D13 and D14: location of Ar/Ar dating samples. B-B′: balanced cross
section of the Malargüe FTB on Fig. 11.

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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3. Stratigraphic framework massive mudstones and shales of the Arroyo Malo Formation (Riccardi
et al., 1997; Riccardi and Iglesia Llanos, 1999; Lanés, 2005) marked the
The lithostratigraphic units of the Malargüe FTB are: Proterozoic to onset of extensional activity in the rift basin. The El Freno Formation
Triassic metamorphic, plutonic and volcanic rocks which constitute crops out in the eastern sector of the Atuel depocentre and is
the basement of the belt; Upper Triassic to Lower Jurassic marine and represented by braided alluvial deposits with a predominant eastern
continental rift sequences deposited in the Neuquén back-arc basin; provenance. The Puesto Araya Formation consists of slope-type fan
Middle Jurassic to Cretaceous platform sequences; and Cenozoic delta deposits (lower section) related to the braided alluvial systems
sedimentary and volcanic rocks. of the easterly El Freno Formation, and storm-dominated shelf
deposits (upper section) (Lanés, 2005). Off-shore shelf black clays-
3.1. Basement rocks tones were conformably deposited over the marine strata of the
Puesto Araya Formation, and correspond to the Tres Esquinas
Basement rocks crop out in the Cordillera Frontal, northeast of the Formation of Toarcian–Bajocian age (Gulisano and Gutiérrez Pleiml-
study area (Fig. 2), and in the San Rafael block, east of the study area. ing, 1994). There is no evidence of faulting during the deposition of the
They consist of Proterozoic metamorphic rocks unconformably over- marine platform strata, indicating that the boundary between fluvial
lain by Upper Paleozoic marine black shales and continental and marine strata in the eastern part of the depocentre marks the end
sandstones, intruded by Upper Paleozoic granitoids (Volkheimer, of the extensional phase, as was suggested by Lanés (2005).
1978). Permian–Triassic intermediate and acid volcanic rocks uncon- The middle Callovian to Oxfordian interval comprises clastics,
formably overlie the previously deformed rocks (Japas and Kleiman, carbonates and evaporites of the Tábanos Formation and the Lotena
2004). Group (Gulisano and Gutiérrez Pleimling, 1994). During Kimmeridgian
times, alluvial, fluvial and eolian continental clastic deposition was
3.2. Neuquén basin infill controlled by normal faults (Tordillo Formation) (Ramos, 1985;
Cegarra and Ramos, 1996; Giambiagi et al., 2003a,b). These continental
The lowermost Mesozoic sequences are Late Triassic to Early deposits were followed by accumulation of calcareous shelf facies
Jurassic marine and fluvial synrift strata, unconformably deposited (Mendoza Group). Aptian to Cenomanian red continental deposits
over deformed basement rocks (Fig. 3). These strata crop out in the overlying these strata are associated with evaporites and marine
western part of the study area (Fig. 2). The deposition of the marine carbonates (Rayoso Group) and Late Cenomanian to Early Campanian

Fig. 3. Generalized stratigraphic column of the Meso-Cenozoic units exposed in the Malargüe FTB (from Gulisano and Gutiérrez Pleimling, 1994, and Legarreta and Gulisano, 1989).
Rift-related units, cropping out in the Atuel depocentre, are defined on the basis of the biostratigraphic zonation and correlation of Riccardi et al. (1997, 1999) and Lanés (2005).

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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continental red beds (Neuquén Group: Gulisano and Gutiérrez Atuel depocentre exhibits an asymmetric architecture interpreted by
Pleimling, 1994, Riccardi et al., 1999). Subsequently, a transgression Manceda and Figueroa (1995) as representing a half-graben with west-
from the Atlantic Ocean allowed the accumulation of clastics and car- facing polarity. Elsewhere (Giambiagi et al., 2005a, 2008; Bechis et al.,
bonates (lower Malargüe Group: Barrio, 1990; Tunik, 2004), followed 2005), we demonstrated that the principal normal faults of the Atuel
by fine-grained Paleocene to Eocene sedimentary rocks of lacustrine depocentre have been inverted and moreover, we documented a
and playa lake origin (upper Malargüe Group). detailed characterization of the depocentre architecture through the
integration of our structural analysis of rift-related faults with previous
3.3. Synorogenic deposits stratigraphic and paleogeographic studies (Lanés, 2005). The depo-
centre comprised the Arroyo Malo and Río Blanco half-grabens (Fig. 4),
Synorogenic sediments and volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks filling where the former is interpreted as a completely submerged sub-basin
a foreland basin are represented by the Miocene Agua de la Piedra and filled with marine syn-rift strata (Arroyo Malo Fm. and lower section of
Loma Fiera Formations, the Pliocene Río Diamante Formation, and the Puesto Araya Fm.) and sag deposits (Tres Esquinas Fm.). Its master
three Pleistocene coarse conglomerate units (Mesones, La Invernada fault, the west-dipping NNW-trending Alumbre fault, is well exposed
and Las Tunas Fms.). These rocks crop out in the Cuchilla de la Tristeza in the headwaters of the Alumbre creek, where it dips at a high angle
range (Fig. 2) and are separated by angular unconformities. Foreland towards the west with no evidence of structural inversion at shallow
basin sedimentation began with deposition of alluvial fan and fluvial levels. In contrast, the Río Blanco half-graben was filled with con-
systems of the Agua de la Piedra Formation over an angular uncon- tinental syn-rift strata (El Freno Fm.) and sag deposits (upper section of
formity (Combina et al., 1994; Combina and Nullo, 2005). This unit the Puesto Araya Fm. and Tres Esquinas Fm.), and was bounded along
is composed of interbedded coarse conglomerate and sandstone its eastern margin by the NNW-trending La Manga master fault. Both
with clasts from volcanic and sedimentary rocks derived from the Alumbre and La Manga faults have been interpreted as pre-existing
Cordillera Principal (Yrigoyen, 1993). The base of this formation is structures reactivated during the rifting event. This reactivation would
composed of andesitic clasts in a tuffaceous sandstone matrix. 40Ar/ have generated an oblique rift with WNW- and NNE-striking oblique
39
Ar ages for two boulders (12.83 ± 0.10 and 13.44 ± 0.08 Ma) at the normal faults.
base of the Agua de la Piedra Formation suggest that the unit is
younger than 13 Ma (Baldauf, 1997). 4.2. Andean deformation
The Loma Fiera Formation unconformably overlies the Agua de la
Piedra Formation. This unit consists of cross-bedded tuffs containing During Miocene to Pleistocene times, the Atuel depocentre was
clasts of pumice and granite, overlain by volcanic breccia, conglom- inverted and incorporated into the thrust sheets of the thick-
erates and tuffaceous sandstones and andesitic tuffs (Yrigoyen, 1993; skinned Malargüe FTB (Kozlowski et al., 1993; Manceda and
Combina and Nullo, 2000), interpreted as pyroclastic and laharic Figueroa, 1995) exerting its structural architecture a profound
deposits (Combina and Nullo, 2000). Conglomerates of this unit influence on the development of the belt. This influence is reflected
appear to interfinger with andesite flows of the Huincan Formation in a variety of structural styles in the study area. We identify several
(Dessanti, 1959) and incorporate granitic and volcanic clasts from the trends of regional structures, significant changes in fold wavelengths
Cordillera Frontal, indicating that by the time the Loma Fiera and multiple detachments (Fig. 5), indicating that the present-day
Formation was deposited the basement was already exposed. 40Ar/ structure of the belt is controlled by major rift-related basement-
39
Ar ages for two boulders (9.51 ± 0.07 and 10.68 ± 0.11 Ma) at the base rooted faults. We argue that the mid-crustal weak zone above which
of the Loma Fiera Formation (Baldauf, 1997) imply a maximum age of basement thrusting occurs was inherited from a previous mid-
9.5 Ma. The overlying conglomerates and sandstones of the Río crustal extensional flat detachment. The propagation of inverted
Diamante Formation exhibit gradational contacts with the Loma Fiera basement faults into the sedimentary cover generated complex
Formation, indicating deposition during a time of decreasing volcanic structures that are restricted to narrow belts characterized by tight
and tectonic activity (Combina and Nullo, 1997).

3.4. Cenozoic volcanism

The older Cenozoic igneous rocks, referred as Molles Suite Intrusives


(Groeber, 1951; Volkheimer, 1978), are composed of lower Miocene
basaltic and andesitic porphyry stocks associated with dacitic hypabys-
sal bodies (Baldauf, 1997), exposed in the western and eastern parts of
the Malargüe FTB. Intense volcanism in the Middle Miocene to Early
Pliocene (Stephens et al., 1991; Baldauf et al., 1992; Ramos and Nullo,
1993; Baldauf, 1997) is grouped in the Huincan Formation. This igneous
activity took place between 10.5 and 5.5 Ma (Baldauf, 1997) and
comprises basaltic andesites and andesites similar in chemistry to the
Teniente Volcanic Complex located tens of kilometres to the west (Nullo
et al., 2006). This magmatic event has been proposed by Baldauf (1997)
to have occurred during the waning stages of, or after compressive
deformation in the eastern sector of the Malargüe FTB. However, we will
show that this volcanic unit has the same age as the main episode of
deformation.

4. Structural setting

4.1. Rift architecture


Fig. 4. Block diagram illustrating the structural architecture of the Atuel depocentre,
The northern part of the Neuquén basin is a predominantly NNW- where the main normal faults have been delineated. Note that the scale is approximate.
trending rift comprising a series of narrow depocentres (Fig. 1). The From Giambiagi et al. (2005a, 2008).

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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L. Giambiagi et al. / Tectonophysics xxx (2008) xxx-xxx 7

Fig. 6. Geological map of the eastern sector of the Malargüe FTB. Modified after Kozlowski et al. (1981) and Cruz et al. (1991) and our own observations. A-A′: seismic line 16029 on Fig. 8.

folding and faulting. Deformation in these areas could have been the Andean deformation developed a thin-skinned system using
complicated by basement short-cut faults which generated several incompetent layers from the Neuquén and Malargüe Groups as
detachment levels in the sedimentary cover. Towards the foreland detachment levels.

Fig. 5. Geological map of the western sector of the Malargüe FTB, based on new field observations and previous stratigraphical studies carried out by Lanés (2005).

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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5. Spatial relationship between thick- and thin-skinned structures

The Malargüe FTB can be divided into western and eastern sectors
on the basis of palaeoenvironmental and tectonic relationships. Their
mutual boundary is defined by the NNW-trending Borbollón–La
Manga lineament, related to the La Manga master fault of the
Mesozoic rift system (Figs. 2 and 4).

5.1. Eastern sector

The eastern sector is an emergent thrust-front system, made up of


several N–S to NNW-trending thrust sheets involving Cretaceous to
Neogene strata in a thin-skinned tectonic style (Fig. 6). The oldest
sedimentary rocks involved in the deformation are Cretaceous shales,
evaporites and red beds. The stratigraphic section is dominated by
several incompetent evaporite and black shale units alternating with
competent sandstone units. At least two main décollements are
regionally developed in the eastern zone and account for the thin-
skinned architecture. The lowermost is located in the lower part of the
Upper Cretaceous red beds and is present in the northern part of the
study area, whereas the shallowest is recorded in the uppermost
Cretaceous beds. In the northern part of the belt, in the Río Diamante
area, a third decóllement is located at the base of the Upper Jurassic–
Lower Cretaceous black shale succession (Kim et al., 2005; Broens and
Pereira, 2005).
Three main thin-skinned thrusts have been identified in this
sector: the Sosneado, Mesón, and Alquitrán faults (Kozlowski, 1984)
uplifted from the upper decóllement in the uppermost Cretaceous
beds (Fig. 6). The Sosneado and Mesón faults uplift the Cuchilla de la
Tristeza range and are thrust-rooted into this shallow detachment.
The Mesón thrust repeats the Neogene Agua de la Piedra Formation,
and is a low-angle, west-dipping, fault with N–S trend. This fault is
associated with a hanging wall syncline, which acted as a Neogene- Fig. 7. The Sosneado thrust in the Cuchilla de la Tristeza range. The fault places the upper
part of the Malargüe Group on top of Pleistocene fanglomerates and it is covered by
Quaternary foreland basin depocentre, in which thick synorogenic
Holocene deposits. See map on Fig. 6 for location.
deposits record the growth history of the belt. The Sosneado thrust
transposes the Paleogene units on top of the Agua de la Piedra and
Pleistocene fanglomerates (Fig. 7). It strikes N–S and dips 24° west. were not deposited (Fig. 3). This sector has previously been studied by
The Alquitrán fault is inferred to generate an open anticline that Fortunatti and Dimieri (2002, 2005), who outlined several backthrusts
affects Upper Cretaceous to Neogene strata in the Cerro Alquitrán area. related to the basement involvement in the deformation. The Andean
Fig. 8 sketches the present-day configuration of the eastern sector structural pattern shows two predominant trends (Fig. 5): NNE-striking
of the belt along the section A-A′ of Fig. 6, as constrained by field and folds and subordinate faults; and N to NNW-striking folds and faults. The
subsurface (seismic and well) data. A migrated reflection seismic western sector is also characterized by a combination of two deforma-
dataset constrained by well log information from the Cuchilla de la tional styles with large-scale open folds and narrow belts of intense east-
Tristeza range was available in this study. Two interpretations of the vergent folding and faulting (Figs. 5 and 9). Large-scale anticlines with
seismic line 16029 have been made to identify the spatial relationship associated synclines suggest regional-scale basement uplift. In the
between thick- and thin-skinned structures. Interpretation A (Fig. 8A) frontal part of these inferred basement-cored folds, we propose that the
assumes that the inversion of the La Manga normal fault accounts for displacement was mainly transferred to the sedimentary cover,
the detachment in the cover and generation of the Mesón, Sosneado generating narrow belts of intense folding of syn-rift and post-rift strata
and Alquitrán thrusts. An alternative approach is shown in inter- (Fig. 9). Broad, long-wavelength folds developed in the hanging walls of
pretation B (Fig. 8B), where the shallow detachment developed in an moderate-to-high-angle reverse faults and are considered to have
initial episode of thin-skinned deformation, not related to the formed by inversion of older normal faults (Fig. 10, A–B). Two structures,
inversion of the master fault, and was folded in the ensuing episode the La Manga and El Freno faults, are interpreted as reactivated rift-
of tectonic inversion, in agreement with previous models of the related normal faults on the basis of the highly variable thicknesses and
northern part of the Malargüe FTB (Pereira, 2003; Kim et al., 2005). facies of the rift sequences (Lanés, 2005), the high cut-off angles along
Both alternatives are geometrically plausible and the low resolution of the faults, the presence of antithetic and synthetic faults reactivated in a
seismic lines along the border between the thick- and thin-skinned reverse sense (Giambiagi et al., 2005b), and syn-extensional unconfor-
zones does not allow us to discriminate between them. As we will see mities preserving the original extensional geometry.
in next sections, we favour interpretation A because of the timing of Fig. 11 is a cross-section incorporating a projection of the
movement of the basement and thin-skinned faults. interpretation A of the seismic line 16029 (Fig. 8A). The cross-section
has been restored with a line-length balance and constant thickness
5.2. Western sector hypothesis for the sedimentary cover, and an area-balanced method
for the basement. In this section, the previously identified (Fig. 4)
In the western sector, outcropping rocks are predominantly Upper three main basement faults are interpreted to be the principal
Triassic–Lower Jurassic rift sequences overlain by Middle Jurassic to structures of the western sector. The faults propagated upwards into
Lower Cretaceous deposits (Fig. 5). The Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene the sedimentary strata, producing shortening accommodated by
rocks have been eroded in this domain, and Neogene synorogenic strata thrusting at depth and by folding in the upper levels of the pile, as

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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Fig. 8. Seismic line 16029 located in the southeastern sector of the Atuel depocentre, and its structural interpretation (see Figs. 2 and 6 for location). Time to depth conversion was
done using Ernesto Cristallini's “Pliegues 2D” program and subsurface data from the YPF.Md.NPQ.x-1 well. Middle J + K: Middle Jurassic to Cretaceous strata (Lotena Group, Tordillo
Fm., and Mendoza, Rayoso and Neuquén Groups); UpperJ + K: Upper Jurassic to Cretaceous strata (Mendoza, Rayoso and Neuquén Groups), Upper K + Paleogene: Upper Cretaceous to
Paleocene (Malargüe Group), AP: Agua de la Piedra Fm., LF: Loma Fiera Fm. and RD: Río Diamante Fm. (A) and (B): Two kinematic models for the interaction between thin- and thick-
skinned deformational zones. Interpretation A assumes that the inversion of the master fault accounts for the detachment in the cover. An alternative approach is shown in
Interpretation B, where a shallow detachment in the sedimentary cover developed first, before the inversion of the master fault.

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Fig. 9. A) Two different tectonic styles observed in the western sector of the Malargüe FTB: narrow belts of intense folding associated with a broad open fold. B) Interpretation of A:
Large-scale anticlines with associated synclines are interpreted as regional basement uplifts during inversion of preexisting normal faults. In the frontal part of these folds,
displacement is mainly transferred to the sedimentary cover generating intense folding in rift-related strata. See map on Fig. 5 for location.

fault-propagation folds. The areas of intense folding and faulting are Triassic–Jurassic master fault, where multiple basement thrusts have
located in front of these large-scale anticlines, as in the region east of been stacked along the eastern limit of the former rift basin. The La
the El Freno anticline, where the marine sag deposits are strongly Manga fault can be interpreted as an inverted, west-dipping, normal
deformed by kink and box folds (Fig. 10, C–D). fault, because rift-related Upper Triassic–Lower Jurassic rocks are
The La Manga fault system is the most significant structure in the present in its hanging wall and absent in the footwall block (Fig. 8). We
foothills, uplifting the Lower Mesozoic sequences on top of the infer that this fault has a convex-up geometry, cutting the basement-
Neogene synorogenic units, and has a throw of several kilometres cover interface at a high angle and progressively decreasing in dip
(Kozlowski, 1984). We interpret this fault system as comprising three upwards. This geometry strongly implies the inversion of a high-angle
related structures, i.e., the Arroyo Blanco fault, the La Manga inverted pre-existing normal fault by upward propagation of a steep basement
normal fault, and a basement by-pass fault (Fig. 11). This highlights an fault into the sedimentary cover. The La Manga by-pass fault has been
important characteristic of the basement-cover interaction along the inferred in the seismic line (Fig. 8). It runs along the Arroyo La Manga

Fig. 10. Examples of two broad open anticlines (A and B), and narrow tightly folded belts located in front of these anticlines (C and D). See map on Fig. 5 for location.

Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069
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Fig. 11. Balanced cross section B-B′ of the Malargüe FTB at 34° 45′S. See Fig. 2 for location. The cross section shows the relationship between the western thick-skinned sector and the eastern thin-skinned sector of the belt. The palinspastic
restitution shows the location of the main normal faults developed during the Triassic–Jurassic extension. During the Neogene inversion, these structures were inverted in association with the generation of basement short-cut faults: Alumbre
short-cut fault (ASF) and El Freno short-cut fault (ESF). The inversion of the La Manga fault is inferred to be associated with the generation of the La Manga by-pass fault (LMBF).

11
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with a NNW-strike (Fig. 5) and overturns Mesozoic beds in the Loma 6.1. Inversion of the Río Blanco half-graben (15–11 Ma)
del Medio range (Kozlowski et al., 1981). The Arroyo Blanco fault crops
out in the Arroyo Blanco creek (Fig. 5), where it transposes Lower We have previously documented the La Manga thrust system as
Jurassic sag deposits over Upper Jurassic red beds and evaporites. comprising three main faults: the inverted La Manga normal fault and
Open folds in the hanging wall of this moderate-to-high angle reverse an associated by-pass fault, and the Arroyo Blanco fault (Figs. 5 and 11).
fault have been disturbed by two associated backthrusts. These faults A maximum age for displacement on the La Manga thrust is given by
have previously been described by Fortunatti et al. (2004) and the age of pre-tectonic subvolcanic rocks, cropping out in the Las
Turienzo et al. (2004) as thin-skinned backthrusts and can be Bardas creek, dated at 14.48 ± 0.61 (2σ error) Ma (Fig. 5). These rocks
distinguished in the seismic lines (Fig. 8). are folded and affected by the deformation in the hanging wall of the
The El Freno fault has been interpreted as a NNE-striking high- fault. In the thick-skinned domain, deformation was accommodated by
angle, reactivated fault with an associated basement short-cut fault movement along the La Manga fault prior to 10.84 Ma, the age of the
(Fig. 11). An abrupt stratigraphic change (Lanés, 2005) correlates with Cerro Tordilla post-tectonic volcanic rocks (Fig. 5). The ages of porphyry
the boundary between areas of open folding and intense folding and dikes in the Río Salado area, south of the Río Atuel, assumed to be
faulting (Giambiagi et al., 2008). The inversion of this fault is marked by syntectonically emplaced by Baldauf (1997), indicate that displace-
the broad El Freno anticline in its hanging wall (Fig. 10B). Its curved ment on the La Manga fault took place between 13.57 ± 0.12 and 13.43 ±
axial plane has been interpreted to reflect the configuration of this 0.09 Ma (Baldauf, 1997). Initial movement on the La Manga fault
normal fault at depth. Associated with this thick-skinned structure, therefore would have occurred between 15 and 11 Ma (Fig. 12).
small-scale anticlines and synclines with angular hinges (kinks and We propose that contractional reactivation of the Río Blanco half-
box-folds) deform the Lower Jurassic sequences, and low-angle thrusts graben began with rigid displacement of the wedge of rift deposits and
formed above shallow detachments, in thin-skinned tectonic style the underlying crystalline basement rocks along the La Manga fault,
(Fig. 10, C–D). The steeply-dipping to overturned beds shown by the being fault displacement dissipated in the cover units by folding. The
outcrops east of the Arroyo El Freno creek reveal structural complexity. syntectonical deposition of the syn-rift strata of the Agua de la Piedra
Associated with the inversion of this fault, we have inferred the Formation indicates that the anticline associated with the first
presence of the El Freno basement short-cut fault to account for the movement on the La Manga fault system would have formed between
generation of a broad open syncline and a low-angle thrust (Fig. 11). 15 and 11 Ma (Fig. 13B).
The Alumbre fault is an approximately 15 km-long, NNW-striking
fault with a continuous trace. It was passively uplifted in the hanging 6.2. Breakthrough of the La Manga fault onto the sedimentary cover and
wall of the El Freno fault, preserving the inherited pattern of extensional reactivation of the El Freno fault (11–9 Ma)
structure at shallow levels. This fault is exposed in the headwaters of
the Arroyo Alumbre creek (Fig. 5). Its orientation is consistent with the After the partial inversion of the Río Blanco half-graben, faults
NNW-trending paleocoast and with paleocurrents ranging from SSW to emanating from the master fault, such as the La Manga bypass fault
NW documented by Lanés (2005). Although in outcrop it presents no (Fig. 11) broke through the entire sedimentary section and reached the
evidence of structural inversion, its lower segment is inferred to have surface (Fig. 13C). The time of breakthrough is well constrained by the
been inverted during Andean compression and to be responsible for a age of the post-tectonic volcanics and by the angular unconformities
series of backthrusts affecting the sedimentary cover. The generation of between the synorogenic strata (Fig. 12). The Loma Fiera Fm. strata
a short-cut fault is associated with a basement wedge and oppositely have filled depressions developed during the generation of the Mesón
verging cover-detached underthrusts (Figs. 5 and 11). This complex fault showing wedge geometry and internal unconformities related to
zone may have formed as a response to buttressing against a basement the uplift of the La Manga fault system. The timing of thrusting of the
high, previously uplifted by the inversion of the El Freno fault. Mesón fault postdates deposition of the Agua de la Piedra Formation,
We therefore infer that the tectonic evolution of the Malargüe FTB although was synchronous with the deposition of the Loma Fiera
involved both thin-skinned tectonics along several shallow detach- Formation in its hanging wall. The angular unconformity between
ments within the Jurassic rift sequences (western sector) and these two synorogenic units (Fig. 8) indicates that this thrust de-
Cretaceous strata (eastern sector) and basement involvement along veloped between 10.5 and 9.5 Ma, the age of the Loma Fiera Formation
a deeper detachment which accommodated stacking of basement (Baldauf, 1997).
thrust units. This model predicts that steep, basement-involved At the same time, the internal deformation of the Río Blanco half-
thrust-ramps in the western sector migrated upsection through graben occurred through the inversion of the El Freno fault system.
cover and evolved into flats when they reached the incompetent The age of movement along this system, related at depth to the
syn-rift strata. A combination of extensional fault inversion and inversion of the pre-existing El Freno normal fault, is determined by
development of new basement short-cut faults accounts for the the ages of pre-tectonic volcanic rocks (11.16 ± 0.28 Ma) and post-
complex structure in the sedimentary cover. tectonic volcanics of the Tres Lagunas hill (9.07 ± 0.24 Ma) (Fig. 2). This
indicates that movement along this fault was contemporaneous with
6. Chronology of deformation the development of the Mesón thrust and La Manga bypass thrust, i.e.,
between 10.5 and 9 Ma, and coincided with the age of emplacement of
In order to constrain the age of the deformation and to choose the Cerro Blanco porphyry copper centre (10.54 Ma — Gigola, 2004)
between both interpretations of thick- and thin-skinned interaction located in its hanging wall (Fig. 5).
(interpretations A and B – Fig. 8), we analyse the timing of
deformation of the principal structures, based on structural relation- 6.3. Inversion of the Arroyo Malo half-graben and generation of the
ships, 40Ar/39Ar dating of tectonic and post-tectonic volcanic and Sosneado thrust (9–8 Ma)
subvolcanic rocks, and the age of foreland basin deposits and
discontinuities separating the different sequences (Fig. 12). Nine Timing of displacement along the thin-skinned thrusts has
volcanic rocks were sampled and studied by laser-induced 40Ar/39Ar previously been studied by Baldauf (1997). He pointed out that
step-heating procedures on hornblendes and whole-rocks (Figs. 2 several stocks were emplaced along the trace of the Sosnedo fault after
and 12). We integrated our data with previous Ar/Ar dating studies by the main pulse of compressive deformation. He dated three of these
Baldauf (1997) and proposed a four-stage temporal model for thrust- stocks (Fig. 2), Cerro La Brea (5.97 ± 0.08 Ma), Cerro Media Luna (6.52 ±
belt development. The four phases are illustrated by cross-sections 0.04 Ma) and Cerro Ventana (7.25 ± 0.32 Ma), indicating that the
that represent time-slices from 15 to 1 Ma (Fig. 13, A-E). Sosneado thrust had moved before 7.25 Ma (Fig. 12). Although these

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Fig. 12. Chart showing the chronology of thick-skinned and thin-skinned thrusting in the Malargüe FTB as determined by radiometric data of pre-, syn- and post-tectonic volcanic and
subvolcanic rocks (D2, D3, D6, D8, D9, D10, D12, D13, D14), relationships of synorogenic units, angular unconformities, and crosscutting structural relationships. The terms pre-, syn-
and post-tectonic are related to relationship between extrusion and movement along the closest fault or fold. Times of displacement along individual faults are represented by the
shaded zone. ⁎1 From Gigola (2004); ⁎2 From Baldauf (1997). Three major pulses of deformation are highlighted. See Fig. 2 for location of radiometric data.

stocks are mainly post-tectonic, there is evidence for reactivation of Our alternative explanation is that the thrust was split by the rigid,
the Sosneado thrust after their emplacement. In the Cerro La Brea pre-existent stock into branches along its western and eastern
area, Baldauf (1997) identified brecciated zones parallel to the fault, in margins. The eastern branch is inferred to have propagated northward
the margin of the stock, and suggested that they are fault zones to generate the brecciated zone in the Cerro La Brea area. Moreover,
generated during the reactivation of the thrust. To the south, on the seismic data indicate that the displacement along the Sosneado thrust
eastern slope of the Cuchilla de la Tristeza range, the thrust plane is took place after deposition of the Agua de la Piedra Formation. Major
exposed along a petroleum platform. In this region, the Sosneado activity on the Sosneado fault followed deposition of the Loma Fiera
thrust displaces the Paleogene Upper Malargüe Group over Pleisto- Formation but preceded that of the Río Diamante Formation, so we
cene fanglomerates (Fig. 7). Baldauf (1997) suggested that the Laguna conclude that it occurred between 9.5 and 7 Ma (Fig. 13D). Toward the
Amarga stock (10.56 ± 0.04) was not affected by the Sosneado thrust. east, cross-cutting relationships, together with emplacement ages,

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Fig. 13. Kinematic model of the evolution of the northern part of the Malargüe fold and thrust belt showing the four-phase evolution of the belt. A) Distribution of pre-existing normal
faults before compression. B) Inversion of the Río Blanco half-graben by reactivation of the basement-seated decóllement. During this time, synorogenic deposits of the Agua de la
Piedra Fm. were deposited in a newly developed foreland basin. C) Maximum episode of deformation, between 10.5 and 9 Ma, coincident with the peak of volcanism of the Huincan
Fm. (Baldauf, 1997). Several basement and thin-skinned faults are interpreted to have simultaneously moved. D) Waning of deformation with inversion of the Arroyo Malo half-
graben. The La Manga fault system was still active. E) After 8 Ma only minor deformation occurred with generation of the Arroyo Blanco fault and movement along the Sosneado
thrust.

indicate that deformation and uplift in the Cerro Alquitrán area must 6.4. Internal deformation of the Río Blanco half-graben and reactivation
have occurred after 10.42 Ma, the emplacement age of the Cerro of the Sosneado thrust (8–1 Ma)
Alquitrán stock (Baldauf, 1997).
In the western zone, displacement on the lower part of the The main phase of deformation in the Malargüe FTB occurred before
Alumbre fault occurred after the uplift and generation of the El Freno 8 Ma, and after that time only minor fault movements have been
anticline, because the related short-cut thrust decapitates the identified. We infer that the Arroyo Blanco fault was generated after the
anticline. The western structures are not rotated by the El Freno main deformation on the La Manga fault system had ended. Structural
anticline and folding of earlier décollements has not been recognized. relationships indicate that this fault has moved after the generation
Therefore, the Alumbre fault inversion could have been responsible for of the La Manga by-pass fault, i.e., between 9 and 8 Ma. There is no
the final uplift of the Cerro Blanco porphyry copper centre, after 9 Ma. evidence of subsequent deformation in the western zone, whereas in the
This indicates that the internal deformation of the Atuel depocentre eastern zone reactivation of the Sosneado and Mesón thrusts took place
occurred after the inversion of the La Manga normal fault. after the deposition of Lower Pleistocene fanglomerates (Fig. 13E).

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7. Discussion: temporal relationship between thick- and thin- faults, with the generation of an early phase of thin-skinned defor-
skinned structures mation in the thrust front, followed by basement inversion tectonics
(e.g., Manceda and Figueroa, 1995; Rojas et al., 1999; Giampaoli et al.,
Many fold-and-thrust belts are combinations of both thin- and 2002; Silvestro and Kraemer, 2005; Kim et al., 2005; Broens and
thick-skinned thrusting as a result of reactivation of preexisting Pereira, 2005).
anisotropies and weakness zones in the crust. In orogenic fronts with For the inversion of the Atuel depocentre, located in the northern
influence of previous rift structures, the temporal relationship part of the Malargüe FTB, we have demonstrated that inversion of
between thick- and thin-skinned deformation is currently a topic of previous normal faults occurred from the master fault, in this case
controversy between two kinematic models (Fig. 14 — zone C). In the located in the foreland, to the hinterland. The reactivation of the
most commonly proposed model, cover detachment on low-friction master fault and the coeval activation of the inferred deep-seated
horizons in the sedimentary cover occurs before, and basement detachment were synchronous with the activation of shallow
inversion occurs afterward, as a result of hinterland-to-foreland detachments and low-angle thrusting in the thin-skinned area. This
sequence of inversion of preexisting normal faults (Fig. 14A). In the indicates that the most plausible kinematic model for the northern
other model, basin inversion occurs early in the history of the fold- part of the Malargüe FTB incorporates inversion during an early
and-thrust belt, in the thin and thick-skinned interaction zone, as a episode of compression. Our chronology of deformation in this sector
result of foreland-to-hinterland sequence of inversion (Fig. 14B). The of the belt indicates that the main phase of deformation occurred
main factors favouring one model or the other are the orientation and during a brief episode of important shortening, mainly between 10.5
dip of preexisting faults with respect to the superimposed compres- and 8 Ma, when displacement occurred simultaneously on several
sional stress field (Sibson, 1985), the fluid overpressure (Turner and major faults detached from different decóllement levels.
Williams, 2004), and the strength of the frictional basal detachment
(Buiter and Pfiffer, 2003). The first model is also favoured by the 8. Conclusions
occurrence of low-friction horizons in the cover, such as the presence
of thick evaporate layers. The Malargüe FTB study yields insight into fold-and-thrust belt
In the Andes of central Argentina and Chile, the first model was evolution. It illustrates the progressive evolution of the thrust front
postulated for the Agrio FTB (Zapata et al., 2002; Zamora Valcarce and the synchronous movement on a number of thrust sheets. The
et al., 2006), located southward of the Malargüe FTB, where hinter- question whether shortening in the basement occurred first and was
land-to-foreland sequence of inversion of previous normal faults is transmitted to the cover, or the cover detached first and basement
inferred to have generated a first phase of thin-skinned deformation thrusting occurred afterwards, has been elucidated through pre-, syn-,
followed by a thick-skinned phase in the thrust front. The second and post-tectonic relations among volcanics and subvolcanic rocks,
model was postulated for the southern part of the Aconcagua FTB structural relationships and foreland basin deposits. Comparison of
(Giambiagi et al., 2003a,b) where the preexisting Jurassic normal the timing of deformation in the thick- and thin-skinned deforma-
faults were completely inverted during the first phase of Andean tional areas strongly supports the hypothesis that the reactivation of
compression. In the Malargüe FTB previous studies have postulated a normal faults was coeval with the activation of shallow detachments
classic hinterland-to-foreland sequence of inversion of extensional and low-angle thrusting at the thrust front of the Malargüe FTB. Low-

Fig. 14. Two kinematic models for the temporal relationship in the interaction zone (dashed box C) between thick- and thin-skinned deformations in fold and thrust belts influenced
by the presence of preexisting normal faults. A) Cover detachment on low-friction horizons occurs before, and basement inversion occurs afterward, as a result of hinterland to
foreland inversion of preexisting normal faults. B) Basin inversion occurs early in the history of the fold and thrust belt, in the thin and thick-skinned interaction zone, as a result of
foreland-to-hinterland sequence of inversion.

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angle thrusts interacted with high-angle faults related to inversion of Giambiagi, L., Alvarez, P.P., Godoy, E., Ramos, V.A., 2003a. The control of pre-existing
extensional structures on the evolution of the southern sector of the Aconcagua fold
basement normal faults inherited from the extensional history of the and thrust belt, southern Andes. Tectonophysics 369, 1–19.
foreland, indicating a mechanics of deformation characterized by Giambiagi, L., Ramos, V.A., Godoy, E., Alvarez, P.P., Orts, S., 2003b. Cenozoic deformation and
superimposed shallow and deep detachment tectonics. Along the tectonic style of the Andes, between 33° and 34° South Latitude. Tectonics 22 (4), 1041.
doi:10.1029/2001TC001354.
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ing, and shallow detachments located within the Jurassic and Proceedings in CD.
Giambiagi, L., Suriano, J., Mescua, J., 2005b. Extensión multiepisódica durante el Jurásico
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Please cite this article as: Giambiagi, L., et al., Temporal and spatial relationships of thick- and thin-skinned deformation: A case study from
the Malargüe fold-and-thrust belt, southern Central Andes, Tectonophysics (2008), doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.069

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