Publication: Anatomy of a mixed marine/non-marine lowstand wedge in a ramp setting. The record of a Barremian/Aptian complex relative sea-level fall in Central Neuquén Basin, Argentina
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Geological Society Publications House
Abstract
During the Cretaceous, western Argentina was occupied by the Neuque´n Basin, a back-arc–foreland basin that was open through the proto-Andes to the Pacific Ocean in the west. The Neuque´n Basin contains a thick succession of sediments that include the offshore marine deposits of the Agrio Formation. These deposits represent a time when the arc was an island chain and the Neuque´n Basin was freely connected to the Pacific. This offshore marine succession is punctuated by two intervals of arid continental deposits that represent major, second-order, relative falls in sea level. In both of these cases there is no evidence of tectonic uplift or angular truncation along a basal bounding unconformity. The upper of the two lowstand wedges is characterized by a complex arragement of shallow-marine and continental deposits. Shallow-marine deposits sharply overlying offshore shales and capped by a master sequence boundary are interpreted as falling-stage deposits recording a complex relative sea-level fall. On top of a regional erosion surface, a drying-upwards succession of fluvial–aeolian deposits is developed, recording a fully non-marine stage in the evolution of the basin. These deposits are overlain by a marginal marine evaporite succession. The absence of a return to fully open-marine conditions is attributed to uplift in the Andes and marks the transition of the Neuque´n Basin from a back-arc to a foreland system. This succession has important implications for the basin’s evolution and in the timing of the uplift of the Andes, is a very spectacular example of a lowstand wedge and is also a major hydrocarbon reservoir.