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  • 1
    Call number: 9/M 07.0050
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Description / Table of Contents: The Neuquén Basin of northern Patagonia provides an excellent case study in basin analysis and sequence stratigraphy. The basin is one of the largest petroleum provinces in South America and includes a dramatic record of relative sea level changes as well as a unique and globally important palaeontological record. Understanding this region is also central to unravelling the history of the Andes. The latest developments in the study of the area have been combined in this volume to give an integrated series of case studies that document the structural, igneous, sedimentological and palaeontological history of the region from the Triassic to the Recent.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VII, 336 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 1862391904
    Series Statement: Geological Society special publication 252
    Classification:
    Regional Geology
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1365-3091
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Accumulation within the unconformity-based Hauterivian Avilé Sandstone of the Neuquén Basin, Argentina, was characterized by a close interaction between fluvial and aeolian processes developed after a major relative sea-level drop that almost completely desiccated the entire basin and juxtaposed these non-marine deposits on shallow- and deep-marine facies. Aeolian deposits within the Avilé Member include dune (A1) and sand sheet (A2) units that characterize the lower part of the unit. Fluvial deposits comprise distal flood units (F1) interbedded with aeolian dune deposits in the middle part of the succession, and low- (F2) and high-sinuosity (F3) channels associated with floodplain deposits (F4) towards the top. The internal characteristics of the aeolian system indicate that its accumulation was strongly controlled by water-table dynamics, with the development of multiple horizontal deflation super surfaces that truncate dune deposits and form the basal boundary of flood deposits and sand sheet units. A long-term wetting-upward trend is recorded throughout the entire unit, with an increase in fluvial activity towards the top and the development of a more permanent fluvial system overlying a major erosion surface interpreted as a sequence boundary. The upward increase in water-table influence might be related to relative sea-level rise, which controlled the position of the water table and allowed the accumulation of tabular aeolian units bounded by horizontal deflation surfaces. This high-frequency, eustatically driven process acted together with a long-term climatic change towards wetter conditions.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: During the Cretaceous, western Argentina was occupied by the Neuquen Basin, a back-arc-foreland basin that was open through the proto-Andes to the Pacific Ocean in the west. The Neuquen 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 Neuquen 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 Neuquen 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.
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  • 4
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 252: 1-14.
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: The Neuquen Basin of Argentina and central Chile contains a near-continuous Late Triassic-Early Cenozoic succession deposited on the eastern side of the evolving Andean mountain chain. It is a polyphase basin characterized by three main stages of evolution: initial rift stage; subduction-related thermal sag; and foreland stage. The fill of the basin records the tectonic evolution of the central Andes with dramatic evidence for base-level changes that occurred both within the basin and along its margins. The record of these changes within the mixed siliclastic-carbonate succession makes the basin an excellent field laboratory for sequence stratigraphy and basin evolution. The 4000 m-thick fill of the basin also contains one of the most complete Jurassic-Early Cretaceous marine fossil records, with spectacular finds of both marine and continental vertebrates. The basin is also the most important hydrocarbon-producing province in southern South America, with 280.4 x 106 m3 of oil produced and an estimated 161.9 x 106 m3 remaining. The principal components of the hydrocarbon system (source and reservoir) crop out at the surface close to the fields. The deposits of the basin also serve as excellent analogues to reservoir intervals worldwide.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: The Cretaceous Troncoso Inferior Member of the Huitrin Formation comprises fluvial and aeolian facies that form a drying-upwards succession within the Neuquen Basin. The basal fluvial sandstones were deposited as braided river deposits and lie unconformably on top of either the deep-marine Agrio Formation or, locally, the shallow-marine Chorreado Member (Huitrin Formation.). In places, the fluvial sandstones are interbedded with remnants of aeolian deposits recording an arid environment and ephemeral flows. In the study area the upper section is predominantly aeolian and was controlled by northerly winds with both linear and transverse dune types being deposited. The depositional system was rapidly flooded and dune topography (relief ranging between 2 and 35 m) was preserved on its top surface. In addition to dune topography, the Troncoso dunes also show evidence of reworking and in situ soft-sediment deformation related to the flooding. The principal aim of this paper is to document the soft-sediment deformation and preservation of topography associated with the flooding of the dune field. Within the soft sediment deformed and reworked sediments at the top of the Troncoso Inferior Member spatial and temporal relationships indicate that they formed in a specific sequence. Initially, water-escape processes created convolutedly folded and dish structures that were concentrated in areas of slightly higher preserved dune topography. Secondly, the convolutedly folded and dish facies were eroded and reworked by wave undercutting and migrating three-dimensional dunes in a shallow-marine environment. This subaqueous reworking resulted in an interbedded massive and cross-stratified unit. With further deepening of the water, the topography became stabilized and the uppermost part of the interval (0.1-0.3 m) was reworked by waves across most of the basin. In the topographic lows between dunes, liquefaction-induced sediment gravity flows deposited massive-flatlaminated facies. The reworked and soft-sediment deformed aeolian dune topography is overlain by the evaporites of the Troncoso Superior Member. The distribution of flood-related facies and the amount of preserved dune topography (2-35 m) indicates that the transgression must have been rapid but of low energy.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2016-04-01
    Description: Carbonate–siliciclastic high-frequency sequences are formed by reciprocal sedimentation. In siliciclastic-dominated successions, the carbonate-rich interval is typically associated with transgressive conditions and relatively low terrigenous influx, particularly in distal parts of the marine basin. However, key questions for each individual case are: What sort of depositional system developed during transgressions, and what controls sediment-supply fluctuations? This paper integrates outcrop and subsurface data to present a high-resolution sequence-stratigraphic study of small-scale (2–18 m), carbonate–siliciclastic cycles deposited during the Valanginian in a proximal–distal transect of the Neuquén Basin (western Argentina) and discusses those key issues. Carbonate hemicycles in this study are composed of cross-bedded oolitic–skeletal grainstones and packstones to massive skeletal floatstones, which accumulated in carbonate ramps with high biogenic production in their distal sector (bivalves, serpulids, echinoids), and significant contribution of non-biogenic (ooids) material in inner-ramp settings. Siliciclastic material is present only at the base of the hemicycles, but rapidly diminishes upwards. These carbonate hemicycles have retrogradational staking patterns in proximal sectors and less obvious trends in distal areas. The siliciclastic hemicycles comprise shallowing-upward successions that include mudstones, bioturbated muddy sandstones, sandstones with HCS and SCS, and bioturbated sandstones. These facies were collectively deposited in a storm- and wave-influenced offshore-shoreface depositional system during normal regressions. These shoreface systems were likely fed by littoral drift from riverine inputs located tens of kilometers to the south. The duration of the investigated small-scale, transgressive–regressive cycles can be estimated in 50 to 150 kyr, and they are bounded by marine transgressive surfaces placed at the bases of carbonate hemicycles. The bounding discontinuities together with the sequence architecture do not suggest periods of sea-level falls between cycles, nor high-amplitude relative sea-level changes during a cycle formation. Additionally, the low proportion of mixed sediments suggests rapid changes in the rate between terrigenous supply and carbonate productivity. The resulting sequence architecture cannot be reasonably explained by autocyclic controls or eustatic changes alone. It is argued here that high-frequency changes in sediment supply, driven by orbitally induced climate fluctuations, could be a better explanation for these sequences, particularly in the context of a long-term relative sea-level rise. In this scenario, periods of low siliciclastic influx during extreme arid conditions would develop a negative balance with accommodation and prompt carbonate systems and transgression. On the other hand, during more humid conditions relatively high sediment flux would temporarily overcome long-term accommodation, producing the regressive siliciclastic hemicycles. As this scenario does not require high-frequency sea-level falls, it would satisfactorily explain the observed sequence architecture. The distal Mulichinco carbonate hemicycles would be hard to distinguish from transgressive, fossiliferous-rich deposits that characterize transgressive–regressive cycles in clastic systems. In the Mulichinco case, however, these carbonate hemicycles are recording the onset of carbonate ramps, not the trapping of siliciclastic sediments in transgressive coasts (e.g., filling estuaries). This alternative scenario, ultimately controlled by reciprocal sedimentation, could be common in epicontinental basins developed under arid to semiarid conditions, and its identification could provide additional templates for basin-scale correlations and hydrocarbon exploration within carbonate–siliciclastic small-scale cycles.
    Print ISSN: 1527-1404
    Electronic ISSN: 1938-3681
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2020-04-23
    Description: Two new isocrinids are described from the Lower Cretaceous Agrio Formation of the Neuquén Basin, west-central Argentina. Isocrinus (Chladocrinus) covuncoensis new species is based on several beautifully preserved specimens from Valanginian beds of the Pilmatué Member. It is characterized by a small size, multiramose crown with six arm divisions, 240 arm tips, mostly isotomous branching, seven (or rarely eight) secundibrachials, smooth and stout column, short noditaxis, and pentalobate columnals. The species occurs in a 30 m thick interval of cross-bedded sandstones and mixed clastic-carbonate sediments that represent the migration of large, tidally influenced, subaqueous dunes developed in the offshore. Sudden burial of crinoids that dwelled on the dune toes and interdunes, possibly by the acceleration of the lee face migration, provided the exceptional preservation of specimens and thus this finding can be considered as a local crinoid Konservat Lagerstätte. Isocrinus (Chladocrinus) pehuenchensis new species is described from a single articulated specimen preserved in a silty calcareous concretion collected from a late Hauterivian concretion level of the Agua de la Mula Member. It is characterized by isotomous branching, eight or nine secundibrachials (IIBr), slender column ornamented with medial ridge of fine tubercles, interradius acuminated with fine tubercles on its tip, short noditaxis, and pentastellate columnals. It is associated with low-energy fall-out deposits in the offshore. The excellent state of preservation was due to an early cementation process by carbonate that enhanced lithification around the specimen.UUID: http://zoobank.org/4763ae70-9d0a-4015-b1c9-6a7ceeedfb1a
    Print ISSN: 0022-3360
    Electronic ISSN: 1937-2337
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-08-30
    Print ISSN: 0276-0460
    Electronic ISSN: 1432-1157
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Springer
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2013-10-01
    Print ISSN: 0037-0738
    Electronic ISSN: 1879-0968
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Elsevier
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-10-01
    Print ISSN: 0037-0738
    Electronic ISSN: 1879-0968
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Elsevier
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