Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 10567)
The Cerro Durazno Pluton belongs to a suite of Paleozoic granitoid intrusions in NWArgentina,
that are central for understanding the tectonic setting of the western margin of
Gondwana in Ordovician and Silurian times. The pluton and its host rocks were tectonically
overprinted by metamorphic mineral shape fabrics formed under middle greenschist-facies
metamorphic conditions and associated with the nearby Agua Rosada Shear Zone.
Kinematic analysis of the shear zone based on the geometric relationship between
individual segments of the shear plane and principal axes of mineral fabric ellipsoids
indicates reverse-sense of shear with a minor component of left-lateral displacement. This
is compatible with the kinematics of other ductile deformation zones in this area,
collectively forming a network, which accomplished orogen-parallel extension in addition
to vertical thickening. Using the Rb-Sr isotopic system, an undeformed pegmatite dike of
the Cerro Durazno Pluton was dated at 455.8 ± 3.6 Ma and mineral fabrics of the Agua
Rosada Shear Zone formed at middle greenschist-facies metamorphism gave deformation
ages of 437.0 ± 3.8 Ma and ≤ 428.4 ± 4.5 Ma. Thus, tectonic overprint at low metamorphic
grade occurred about 20-30 Ma after terminal magmatism in the Cerro Durazno area. Our
data from the Cerro Durazno area and regional considerations suggest that the western
margin of Gondwana was characterized by orogen-parallel extension in addition to crustal
thickening as well as episodes of magmatism and ductile deformation that varied greatly in
time and space.
(2008): Age and kinematics of ductile deformation in the Cerro Durazno area, NW Argentina: Significance for orogenic processes operating at the western margin of Gondwana during Ordovician-Silurian times. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 26, 1, 78-90.
(2008): Age and kinematics of ductile deformation in the Cerro Durazno area, NW Argentina: Significance for orogenic processes operating at the western margin of Gondwana during Ordovician-Silurian times. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 26, 1, 78-90.

