The thick-skinned Sierras Pampeanas morphotectonic domain of western and northwestern Argentina (27°S-33°S) is characterized by reverse-fault-bounded basement blocks that delimit internally deformed, Neogene sedimentary basins. Forelandbasin evolution in this part of the Andes is still not very well understood. For example, challenging questions exist as to how thickskinned deformation develops, if there are distinct spatiotemporal trends in deformation and exhumation, how such deformation styles infl uence sedimentation patterns, and whether or not broken foreland basins are related to regional plate-tectonic processes, such as fl at-slab subduction.The Fiambalá basin of the northwestern Sierras Pampeanas is the largest of several intermontane basins in the transition to the southern margin of the Puna Plateau. This basin preserves a thick continental Neo-gene sequence that provides information on the dynamics of thick-skinned deformation and resulting sedimentation. The Fiambalá basin contains ~4 km of fl uvial-alluvial sedimentary rocks that comprise the Tamberia, Guanchin, and Punaschotter Formations. U-Pb geochronology of ashes intercalated within the Fiambalá stratigraphic sequence demonstrates that these sedimentary rocks are late Miocene to Pliocene (8.2 ± 0.3 Ma to 3.05 ± 0.4 Ma) in age. Sedimentology and provenance data indicate that the source of the Tamberia Formation was located to the west of the modern western basin-bounding range. The Guanchin and Punaschotter Formations record input from local sources, including the modern basin-bounding range to the west and the southern Puna Plateau to the north, suggesting reorganization of the catchment area at ca. 5.5 Ma.The coarsening-upward trends recorded by the fl uvial Tamberia and Guanchin Formations indicate enhanced tectonics and relief during sedimentation. The Punaschotter conglomerates record alluvial-fan sedimentation and local sources. Fault kinematic data document a contractional regime, characterized by E-W and NE-SW shortening, active throughout the middle-late Miocene and Pliocene. Furthermore, a comparison between the Fiambalá basin and similar sedimentary basins in the Sierras Pampeanas (e.g., Bermejo foreland basin) and the Eastern Cordillera leads us to propose that the study area originally constituted an integral part of a continuous and more extensive foreland-basin system (thin-skinned) for much of its early history. Our data suggest coeval intrabasin deformation along strike from the Bermejo region northward to the Eastern Cordillera. The coeval change at ca. 6 Ma from a regional to more compartmentalized (thick-skinned) tectono-sedimentary environment in the regions adjacent to the Eastern Cordillera, the southern Puna margin, and other sectors within the Sierras Pampeanas domain may thus refl ect a regional tectonic process related to fl at subduction. Our data, combined with existing sedimentological and petrological evidence, imply that the passage from steep to fl at subduction occurred synchronously from ~30°S to ~26°S.
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