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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
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Convenio YPFB-Orstom Santa Cruz, Bolivia Abstract The Late Cambrian-Early Ordovician
margin was initially a passive margin. It became an active one during a
Middle Ordovician compressional episode and was controlled by large-scale
transtensional or transpressional conditions from the Late Ordovician to
the Triassic. The Late Ordovician-Mississippian evolution was characterized
by vigorous subsidence of the marine foreland, which was filled with thick,
shallowing-upward sequences showing northeastward onlaps. Ashgill and latest
Devonian-Mississippian glaciomarine and fluctuating sea level processes
are recorded in the succession. Shallow marine carbonates, marls, and sandstones,
as well as some evaporites and eolianites, were deposited during Pennsylvanian-Early
Triassic time.
After Middle Triassic rifting
was aborted, the Bolivian basin behaved in a cratonic way until it was
caught up in the Andean system due to the onset of transtension along the
margin in the Late Jurassic. It became part of the Andean foreland domain
in early Senonian time. Andean thrust deformation propagated into Bolivia
from the west in the late Oligocene and progressed eastward through Neogene
time.
Organic-rich units correlate
with Paleozoic highstand deposits and younger transgressions. Generation,
migration, and trapping of hydrocarbons depended mainly on Cenozoic sedimentary
burial and tectonic loading and hence on propagation of Andean deformation. |
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