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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract


 
Chapter from: M 62: Petroleum Basins of South America 
Edited by 
A. J. Tankard, R. Suarez Soruco, and H. J. Welsink

Authors:
D. Roeder and R. L. Chamberlain

Basin and Aerial Analysis/Evaluation

Published 1995 as part of Memoir 62
Copyright © 1995 The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.  All Rights Reserved.

 

Structural Geology of Sub-Andean Fold and Previous HitThrustNext Hit Belt in Northwestern Bolivia

 

D. Roeder
Institut für Lithosphärenforschung
Justus Liebig-Universität
Giessen, Germany

 

R. L. Chamberlain
Blue Eagle Exploration Inc.
Salisbury, North Carolina, U.S.A.
 
Abstract

Seismic data, worldwide analogs, and surface geologic data show that the sub-Andean belt of northwestern Bolivia is a thin-skinned Dahlstromian fold and Previous HitthrustNext Hit belt with an estimated 150 km of Neogene bulk strain and 100 km of late Miocene-Pliocene bulk strain. The location adjacent to a suggested 70-km-deep Moho root and to a steep segment of the Peru-Chile subduction zone suggests that none of the mapped structures are thick-skinned foreland upthrusts. Based on consistent but inconclusive evidence, we distinguish an allochthonous complex transported above a Main sub-Andean Previous HitthrustNext Hit and a parautochthonous toe addition complex with three emerging frontal Previous HitthrustNext Hit sheets and several poorly constrained subthrust imbrications. The Main sub-Andean Previous HitthrustNext Hit unit had a Previous HitblindTop front with an upper detachment that could have absorbed any amount of bulk strain.

Sub-Andean thrusting is explained as a response to two covariant forces. During the early-middle Tertiary, an asthenospheric wedge stacked the crust and the early sub-Andean structures. With the decay of the mantle wedge and the buoyant uplift of the Altiplano, plateau collapse gradually replaced the crustal stacking.

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