alpshop2022-4
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2022-4
15th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Exhumation response to climate and tectonic forcing in the southern Patagonian Andes (Torres del Paine and Fitz Roy plutonic complexes) 

Veleda Astarte Paiva Muller1, Christian Sue2, Pierre Valla2, Pietro Sternai1, Thibaud Simon-Labric3, Cécile Gautheron2, Joseph Martinod2, Matias Ghiglione4, Lukas Baumgartner5, Fréderic Hérman5, Peter Reiners6, Djordie Grujic7, David Shuster8, Jean Braun9, Laurent Husson2, and Matthias Bernet2
Veleda Astarte Paiva Muller et al.
  • 1Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Milan, Italy (v.paivamuller@campus.unimib.it)
  • 2Institute des Sciences de la Terre (ISTerre), Université Grenoble Alpes - Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, IRD, IFSTTAR, Grenoble - Chambéry, France.
  • 3Centre de Géologie Oisans Alpes, Musée des Minéraux, 38520 Bourg-d'Oisans, France
  • 4Instituto de Estudios Andinos “Don Pablo Groeber”, Universidad de Buenos Aires, CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • 5Institut des Sciences de la Terre (ISTE), Université de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
  • 6Geosciences University of Arizona, Tucson, USA
  • 7Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada
  • 8Earth and Planetary Science, University of California – Berkeley, USA
  • 9Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

Alpine landscapes form in mountain belts that likely experienced tectonic uplift during plate’s convergence, and efficient erosion dominated by glacial carving and circle retreat. In southern Patagonia N-S oriented late Miocene plutonic complexes are exposed in deep incised valleys with summits topographically above the glacial equilibrium line altitude. Two of the most emblematic ones are the Fitz Roy (Chaltén, latitude 49°S) and the Torres del Paine (latitude 51°S) plutonic complexes, ~2 km higher than the mostly flat bottom valley that is partially covered by the Southern Patagonian Icefield. This continental region is located above an asthenospheric window that opens and migrates from the latitude 54 °S towards the latitude 46 °S since ~16 Ma, and experienced dynamic uplift during episodes of spreading ridge collision with the continental margin. Here we present a new dataset of combined low-temperature thermochronometers from the Chaltén and Torres del Paine plutonic complexes, and their thermal history inversion numerical modeling, to identify the geodynamic processes forcing on the exhumation of the mountain belt. These complexes are separated by 200 km along the strike of the belt, and share a pulse of rapid exhumation at ca. 6 Ma, likely showing that glaciation was regionally starting at this moment. After a period of quiescence, in Torres del Paine the exhumation rate is accelerated from ~2 Ma to the present, interpreted as a signal of the Pleistocene climatic transition creating incise valleys. Only in the Fitz Roy a pulse of rapid exhumation is present at ca. 10 Ma, approximately coincident with the time range in which the ridge was subducting beneath the continent at that latitude. This allows us to separate the climatic from the tectonic/mantle forcing to the exhumation in southern Patagonia, and represents the first in-situ observation of the passage of the asthenospheric window in the low-temperature thermochronometric record of the region.

How to cite: Paiva Muller, V. A., Sue, C., Valla, P., Sternai, P., Simon-Labric, T., Gautheron, C., Martinod, J., Ghiglione, M., Baumgartner, L., Hérman, F., Reiners, P., Grujic, D., Shuster, D., Braun, J., Husson, L., and Bernet, M.: Exhumation response to climate and tectonic forcing in the southern Patagonian Andes (Torres del Paine and Fitz Roy plutonic complexes) , 15th Emile Argand Conference on Alpine Geological Studies, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 12–14 Sep 2022, alpshop2022-4, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-alpshop2022-4, 2022.