Purilactis Group

Coordinates: 22°45′56″S 68°27′47″W / 22.76556°S 68.46306°W / -22.76556; -68.46306
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Purilactis Group
Geological group
Unit ofSalar de Atacama basin
Thickness>6,000 m (20,000 ft)[1]
Lithology
PrimaryConglomerate, basaltic andesite lava, rhyolitic ignimbrite
OtherGypsum
Location
Coordinates22°45′56″S 68°27′47″W / 22.76556°S 68.46306°W / -22.76556; -68.46306
RegionAntofagasta Region
CountryChile

Purilactis Group (

formations of Cretaceous to Eocene age in Salar de Atacama basin, northern Chile.[1] The group has a stratigraphic thickness of more than 6000 m.[1] The group overlies basement rocks of Late Paleozoic age.[1][2] The north-south El Bordo Escarpment of Cordillera Domeyko contain the main outcrops of the group.[1] The group has been difficult to date in detail since it hosts few fossils and dateable minerals.[1] The sediments of the group deposited when volcanism in the area was mainly occurring to the west of it, rather than to east as in the present-day. In geological terms this qualifies the basin as a back-arc basin.[2]

From top to bottom, the main units (formations) of the group outlined by Mpodozis and co-worders in 1999 are:[1]

  • Cerro Puntiagudo Strata
  • Loma Amarilla Strata
  • "Orange" Unit
  • Cerro Totola Strata
  • Barros Arana Strata
  • Purilactis Formation
    • Río Grande Member
    • Serilao Member
    • Vizcachita Member
    • Licán Member
    • Limón Verde Member
  • Tonel Formation

Tonel Formation is separated from Purilactis Formation by a

tectonic inversion beloning to the "Incaic Phase" of the Andean orogeny.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Mpodozis, Constantino; Arriagada, César; Roperch, Pierrick (1999-10-06). Cretaceous to Paleogene geology of the Salar de Atacama basin, northern Chile: A reappraisal of the Purilactis Group stratigraphy. Fourth ISAG, Goettingen. Goettingen, Germany.
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ Flint, Stephen S.; Hartley, A.J.; Rex, David C.; Guise, P.; Turner, Peter (1989). "Geochronology of the Purilactis Formation, Northern Chile: an insight into late cretaceous/early tertiary basin dynamics of the central Andes". Revista Geológica de Chile. 16 (2): 241–246.