EGU21-3543, updated on 03 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3543
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Petrotectonic implications of metabasites of the Eastern Andean Metamorphic Complex at Lago O´Higgins-San Martin, southern Patagonia

Diego Rojo1,2, Mauricio Calderón3, Matias Ghiglione2, Rodrigo Javier Suárez2, Paulo Quezada4, Francisco Hervé3,5, Marly Babinski6, and C. Mark Fanning7
Diego Rojo et al.
  • 1Arturo Prat University, Arturo Prat, Facultad de Ingeniería, iquique, Chile (d.rojomartel@gmail.com)
  • 2Instituto de Estudios Andinos IDEAN (Universidad de Buenos Aires - CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • 3Carrera de Geología, Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad Andres Bello, Sazié 2119, Santiago, Chile
  • 4Instituto LAMIR, universidad de Federal do Paraná, Centro Politécnico, Jardim das Américas, Curitiba 81531-980, PR, Brazil
  • 5Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Chile, Plaza Ercilla 803, Santiago, Chile
  • 6Instituto de Geociências, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
  • 7Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

The Eastern Andean Metamorphic Complex (EAMC) in southwestern Patagonia (4°-52°S) is a 450 km long belt mainly composed by low-grade metasedimentary rocks of Upper Devonian-lower Carboniferous, and Permian-lower Triassic ages. Previous works have suggested a passive margin environment for the deposition of the protolith.  The EAMC comprise scarce interleaved tectonic slices of marbles, metabasites, and exceptional serpentinite bodies. At Lago O´Higgins-San Martin (48°30’S-49°00’S) the metasedimentary sucessions are tectonically juxtaposed with lenses of pillowed metabasalts and greenschists having OIB, N-MORB, BABB and IAT geochemical affinities. The Nd-isotopic composition of metabasalts is characterized by εNd(t=350 Ma) of +6 and +7. The metabasalts show no signal of crustal contamination, instead, the mantle source was probably modified by subduction components. New and already published provenance data based on mineralogy, geochemistry and zircon geochronology indicate that the quartz-rich protolith of metasandstones were deposited during late Devonian-early Carboniferous times (youngest single zircon ages around of latest Devonian-earliest Carboniferous times) sourced from igneous and/or sedimentary rocks located in the interior of Gondwana, as the Deseado Massif, for instance. Noticeable, the detrital age patterns of all samples reveal a prominent population of late Neoproterozoic zircons, probably directly derived from igneous and/or metaigneous rocks of the Brasiliano/Pan-African orogen or from reworked material from variably metamorphosed sedimentary units that crops out at the same latitudes in the extra-Andean region of Patagonia. We propose that the protolith of metabasites formed part of the upper part of an oceanic-like lithosphere generated in a marginal basin above a supra-subduction zone, where plume-related oceanic island volcanoes were generated. The closure of the marginal basin, probably in mid-Carboniferous times, or soon after. The oceanic lithosphere was likely underthrusted within an east-to-northeast-dipping subduction zone, where ophiolitic rocks and metasedimentary sequences were tectonically interleaved at the base of an accretionary wedge.

How to cite: Rojo, D., Calderón, M., Ghiglione, M., Suárez, R. J., Quezada, P., Hervé, F., Babinski, M., and Fanning, C. M.: Petrotectonic implications of metabasites of the Eastern Andean Metamorphic Complex at Lago O´Higgins-San Martin, southern Patagonia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3543, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3543, 2021.

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