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TECTONICS, VOL. 29, TC6007, doi:10.

1029/2010TC002666, 2010

Extensional basin evolution in the Cordillera Blanca, Peru:


Stratigraphic and isotopic records of detachment faulting
and orogenic collapse in the Andean hinterland
Melissa K. Giovanni,1 Brian K. Horton,2 Carmala N. Garzione,3 Brendan McNulty,4
and Marty Grove5
Received 12 January 2010; revised 9 August 2010; accepted 17 August 2010; published 30 November 2010.

[1] Sedimentologic, provenance, oxygen isotope, and


40

Ar/39Ar results provide insights into late Cenozoic


evolution of an extensional hinterland basin in the Peruvian Andes. The 56.5 km Cordillera Blanca composes the glaciated footwall of a lowangle normal
fault parallel to active contractional structures in the
Andean foldthrust belt. The 200 km long, WSW
dipping (1936) Cordillera Blanca detachment fault
accommodated >1215 km of dipslip displacement,
inducing subsidence of the hangingwall supradetachment basin, which is filled by 1300 m of conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone, and limited carbonate of the
upper MiocenePliocene Lloclla Formation. Lithofacies associations are attributed to lacustrine fandelta
to proximal, streamdominated alluvial fan sedimentation. Provenance data record footwall unroofing of
Jurassic through Miocene volcanic and sedimentary
rocks during NW directed, axial dispersal of sediment.
Provenance data record the appearance of footwall
derived granite clasts from the upper Miocene Cordillera Blanca batholith and a change to transverse, WSW
directed transport. Variations in the character and preservation of basin fill suggest alongstrike propagation
of the fault through time. Initial extension and subsidence is constrained to the latest Miocene by an
40
Ar/39Ar biotite age of 5.4 0.1 Ma for a basal tuff
in the Lloclla Formation. Estimation of paleolake
water composition shows very negative d 18O(VSMOW)
values (13.6 to18.2), indicating that high elevations comparable to modern were already attained in
the Cordillera Blanca during earliest normal faulting
and basin evolution. These results lend support to models
1
Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta,
Canada.
2
Institute for Geophysics and Department of Geological Sciences,
Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
Texas, USA.
3
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of
Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA.
4
Department of Earth Sciences, California State University Dominguez
Hills, Carson, California, USA.
5
Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Stanford
University, Stanford, California, USA.

Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.


02787407/10/2010TC002666

suggesting that substantial shortening, crustal thickening,


and surface uplift were necessary precursor conditions
for the generation of the Cordillera Blanca detachment
fault. Citation: Giovanni, M. K., B. K. Horton, C. N. Garzione,
B. McNulty, and M. Grove (2010), Extensional basin evolution in
the Cordillera Blanca, Peru: Stratigraphic and isotopic records of
detachment faulting and orogenic collapse in the Andean
hinterland, Tectonics, 29, TC6007, doi:10.1029/2010TC002666.

1. Introduction
[2] Although extensional deformation during convergence
is observed in elevated hinterlands of ancient foldthrust belts
[e.g., Burchfiel et al., 1992; Hodges and Walker, 1992; Axen
et al., 1995; Wells, 1997], few cases of active hinterland
extension have been identified in contractional retroarc systems. In the Andes of South America, smalldisplacement
(<100 m) faults locally accommodate limited hinterland
extension [Sebrier et al., 1985; Lavenu, 1986; Mercier et al.,
1992], but the Cordillera Blanca of Peru is the only example
of active, largemagnitude extension with pronounced footwall topography [McNulty and Farber, 2002]. The Cordillera
Blanca (Figure 1) contains >15 peaks above 6 km and is
bounded by a welldefined WSW dipping normal fault with
considerable displacement and seismic activity [Schwartz,
1988; Deverchere et al., 1989]. Possible explanations for
late Cenozoic normal faulting in the Cordillera Blanca
include collapse of thick crust [Dalmayrac and Molnar,
1981; Sebrier et al., 1988a], fault reactivation [Schwartz,
1988], strain partitioning during convergence [McNulty et al.,
1998], flatslab subduction [McNulty and Farber, 2002], or
pluton emplacement [Petford and Atherton, 1992].
[3] The lack of a consensus over the mechanism(s) driving extension in the Peruvian Andes highlights the incomplete picture of the geologic history of the Cordillera Blanca
and adjacent Callejon de Huaylas basin. Although the
Cordillera Blanca detachment fault is active, few constraints
are available on the timing of initial slip. For the corresponding supradetachment basin, uncertainty persists over
controls on the timing, amount, and spatial variability of
hangingwall subsidence. Furthermore, given the Cordillera
Blancas distinction as one of the highest topographic elements of the Andes, it is important to consider the past
elevation history and its relationship to earlier shortening
and later extension.
[4] The goals of this study are to identify the timing and
mode of extensional basin evolution along the Cordillera

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Figure 1. Simplified regional map of the NazcaSouth America plate boundary showing Peruvian flat
slab segment (ruled pattern) and major tectonic/physiographic zones: (1) coastal zone, (2) Western Cordillera, (3) Altiplano, (4) Eastern Cordillera, and (5) Subandean foldthrust belt (SFTB) [after Dalmayrac and
Molnar, 1981; Suarez et al., 1983]. Small polygon shows outline of Cordillera Blanca region (Figure 2).
NazcaSouth America convergence rate for 12S is from DeMets et al. [1994]. DEM base map from the
National Geophysical Data Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (http://www.ngdc.
noaa.gov).
Blanca detachment fault in order to constrain the history of
early extensional processes in the Peruvian hinterland. In
addition to characterizing sediment provenance and depositional processes in the Callejon de Huaylas basin,
40
Ar/39Ar geochronology of volcanic rocks and oxygen
isotopic analyses of basinfill carbonates provide insights
into the absolute age of faultinduced subsidence and
paleoelevation of the adjacent footwall.

2. Geologic Setting
2.1. Regional Tectonic Context
[5] Although largemagnitude extension is rare along the
modern Andean margin, a zone of significant normal faulting

is concentrated in the Cordillera Blanca of Peru (Figure 1).


The region is situated above the modern flatslab segment of
the subducted Nazca plate [Gutscher et al., 1999; Giovanni
et al., 2002; Hampel, 2002; Rosenbaum et al., 2005]. The
Cordillera Blanca normal fault and associated Callejon de
Huaylas basin (Figure 2) are distinguished by their hinterland location and orientation perpendicular to regional EW
to ENEWSW compression in the Andean foldthrust belt
to the east. Quaternary fault scarps and seismicity in the
Cordillera Blanca provide evidence of normal faulting oriented parallel to the NNW strike of active compressional
structures in the thrust belt of the Eastern Cordillera and
Subandean Zone [Yonekura et al., 1979; Dalmayrac and
Molnar, 1981; Suarez et al., 1983; Schwartz, 1988]. Micro-

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Figure 2
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Figure 3. Schematic WSWENE cross section through hangingwall supradetachment basin (location
in Figure 2) adjacent to Cordillera Blanca normal fault (CBNF). Black line in lowermost Lloclla Formation indicates position of basal Lloclla tuff. Subsurface depiction of structural geometry is based on
thicknesses reported for the Tertiary Calipuy Formation, Cretaceous sedimentary rocks and Jurassic
Chicama Formation from Cobbing et al. [1996] and Cobbing and Sanchez [1996].
seismicity beneath the hangingwall basin and earthquake
focal mechanisms recorded from the 1946 Ancash earthquake
(Ms = 7.2) 100 km to the NE demonstrate the broad extent
of hinterland extension [Doser, 1987; Deverchere et al.,
1989; Bellier et al., 1991]. The contrast between the hinterland and frontal thrust belt has been explained by buoyancy
forces arising from the gravitational body force acting on the

elevated Cordillera Blanca and associated crustal root


[Dalmayrac and Molnar, 1981; Suarez et al., 1983; Molnar
and LyonCaen, 1988]. This configuration results in a delicate balance between the compressive forces affecting the
east flank of the Andes and the gravitational force acting on
the highest parts of the orogen.

Figure 2. Geologic map of the Cordillera Blanca extensional system at 8.5S10S [from Wilson, 1967a, 1967b, 1967c;
Cobbing and Sanchez, 1996]. Traces of southern fault segments are simplified from Schwartz [1988]. Peak elevations
are listed in m. Line near Quebrada Lloclla (15 km south of Huaraz) denotes the location of WSWENE cross section
(Figure 3). Open arrows show view directions of fault photographs (Figures 4a and 4b).
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Figure 4. Photographs of the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault. (a) View SE along fault scarp. Black dashed line
marks the fault in the middle ground. White dashed line
marks the fault in the background. Fault dip decreases in
the updip (NE) direction. (b) View NW along fault scarp,
with houses at lower left for scale. In this region, the fault
scarp is exposed for >2 km in the downdip direction. More
than 1.5 km of relief is visible in this photo.
2.2. Cordillera Blanca Extensional System
[6] At 8.510S, the Cordillera Blanca defines the PacificAtlantic drainage divide, with peak elevations exceeding
56.5 km (Figure 2). The NNW trending range is bounded
on its west flank by the 200 km long Cordillera Blanca
detachment fault. The WSW dipping normal fault strikes
approximately N30W (Figure 2), with dips varying from
36 in the north to 19 in the south. Directly west of the
fault lies a narrow (1015 km wide) valley occupied by an
axial river, the NW flowing Rio Santa, and exposures of
MioceneQuaternary strata of the Callejon de Huaylas basin
on the downthrown hanging wall (Figure 3).
[7] In the footwall, the Cordillera Blanca consists of a
Neogene granodiorite (Figures 2 and 3) that intrudes the
Upper Jurassic Chicama Formation and forms a steepsided,

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flatroofed batholith. The Cordillera Blanca batholith is


200 km long by 20 km wide and plunges to the south
[Cobbing et al., 1981]. The batholith is composed of Miocene granodiorite that has a reported UPb zircon crystallization age of 8.2 0.2 Ma [McNulty et al., 1998]. Adjacent
to the detachment, a mylonite zone up to 1 km thick continues from the fault into the footwall batholith.
[8] Observed thicknesses for Cretaceous sedimentary units
(4.5 km) and Tertiary volcanic units (2 km) [Cobbing
et al., 1996; Cobbing and Sanchez, 1996] constrain the
subsurface geometry of the hanging wall (Figure 3). Restoration of the JurassicCretaceous contact reveals 1215 km
of minimum dipslip displacement on the detachment. This
estimate is consistent with the 3 kbar emplacement depth
inferred for the Cordillera Blanca batholith on the basis of
metamorphic mineral assemblages in Jurassic host rocks
[Petford and Atherton, 1992; McNulty and Farber, 2002].
[9] The main strand of the Cordillera Blanca normal fault
is well defined over a >120 km lateral distance with exposures exhibiting up to 2.5 km of vertical relief (Figure 4).
However, 15 km south of Huaraz, the fault breaks into
several smaller segments that define a disrupted zone of
stepover faults marking the structures southern continuation (Figure 2). Fault scarps cutting Pleistocene and Holocene glacial deposits demonstrate active faulting [Yonekura
et al., 1979; Schwartz, 1988].
[10] The Callejon de Huaylas basin is a supradetachment
basin [e.g., Friedmann and Burbank, 1995] in the hanging
wall of the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault (Figures 2
and 3). Previous studies suggested accumulation coeval
with Pliocene extension [Bonnot, 1984; Bonnot et al., 1988].
Fault motion has been interpreted as principally normal slip
with a leftlateral component [Bonnot et al., 1988; Sebrier
et al., 1988b; Petford and Atherton, 1992; McNulty et al.,
1998]. Although basin fill is largely covered by younger
glacial debris, the wellexposed Neogene Lloclla Formation
is preserved in the southern Rio Santa valley.
2.3. Callejon de Huaylas Basin
[11] The main stratigraphic units defining the Callejon de
Huaylas basin include the MiocenePliocene Lloclla Formation and overlying glacial deposits (Figures 2 and 3). The
Lloclla Formation consists of an upwardcoarsening, 1300 m
thick succession of principally conglomeratic deposits. Where
exposed in the southern Rio Santa valley, it unconformably
overlies the Eocene to Miocene Calipuy Formation, which
yielded KAr biotite and muscovite ages of 52.5 2.3 to 14.8
2.4 Ma [Cobbing et al., 1981]. Capping the Lloclla is a suite of
glacial sediments, with the youngest units deposited during the
last glacial maximum, estimated regionally at 13,200 ka
[Rodbell, 1992, 1993; Rodbell and Seltzer, 2000; Farber et al.,
2005]. Cosmogenic radionuclide (10Be and 26Al) ages of glacial deposits suggest regional glaciation initiated at 1.4 Ma
in Peru [Smith et al., 2005].
[12] The Lloclla Formation is not preserved in the north
part of the basin, where glacial deposits cap Tertiary volcanic rocks and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks (Figure 2). In
the northern Rio Santa valley, up to 800 m of ignimbrites
compose the upper Miocene Yungay Formation, possible

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Figure 5. Measured stratigraphic section for the Lloclla Formation from Quebrada Lloclla and Telar
Huain, depicting lithofacies, conglomerate clast compositions, paleocurrent orientations, carbonate and
sandstone sample locations, and 40Ar/39Ar age data for the basal Lloclla tuff. Corresponding vertical plots
show upsection changes in maximum clast size and stratal dip.

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Figure 6. Photographs of representative lithofacies in the Lloclla Formation. (a) Basal Lloclla tuff (Vt).
(b) Normally graded siltstone and mediumgrained sandstone (Fm, Sn), Lower Member. (c) Ledge
(50 cm) of freshwater carbonate (Cm) within mediumgrained sandstone (Sm, Sh), Lower Member.
(d) Cliffs of massive, clastsupported, cobbleboulder conglomerate (Gcm, Gci) near top of section.
(e) Massive, clastsupported, cobbleboulder conglomerate with welldefined imbrication (Gci), Upper
Member.
extrusive products from the Cordillera Blanca batholith.
The ignimbrites unconformably overlie Jurassic and Cretaceous clastic units and Eocene to middle Miocene Calipuy
volcanic rocks (Figure 2). KAr biotite ages from Yungay
ignimbrites range from 7.6 0.2 to 6.2 0.2 Ma [Cobbing
et al., 1981]. New 40Ar/39Ar analyses of biotite grains from
Yungay ignimbrites, presented below, yield ages between
8.7 1.6 and 7.5 0.2 Ma.
[13] A schematic cross section through the southern Rio
Santa valley (near Recuay) illustrates the structural context
for the Callejon de Huaylas basin, with subsurface relationships based on stratigraphic thicknesses (Figure 3).
Additional constraints include angular unconformities
defining basal and upper contacts of the Lloclla Formation
[Bonnot et al., 1988].

[14] The structural and stratigraphic configuration


(Figure 3) provides insight into the unroofing pattern resulting
from exhumation of the footwall of the Cordillera Blanca fault.
A simple unroofing sequence would involve initial erosion of
Tertiary volcanic rocks followed by Cretaceous sedimentary
rocks, the Jurassic Chicama Formation, and ultimately granite
of the Cordillera Blanca batholith.

3. Basin Analysis
3.1. Stratigraphy and Sedimentology
[15] The Lloclla Formation [Bonnot, 1984; Bonnot et al.,
1988] is a succession of principally clastic rocks that lies
unconformably on the Eocene to middle Miocene Calipuy
Formation (Figure 5) and is in angular unconformity with

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Table 1. Description and Interpretation of Sedimentary Lithofaciesa


Facies Code

Description

Gcm

Clastsupported, massive cobbleboulder


conglomerate. Poorly sorted,
subrounded to rounded clasts,
weak normal grading,
no imbrication, occasional
erosional scours.
Clastsupported, massive cobbleboulder
conglomerate with imbrication. Poorly sorted,
subrounded to rounded clasts.
Clastsupported, pebble conglomerate with
imbrication, mediumto wellsorted,
horizontal stratification.
Clastsupported, pebble conglomerate with
lowangle stratification, scoured basal
contacts, interbedded coarsegrained
sandstone lenses.
Massive sandstone. Mediumto coarsegrained,
moderately sorted.
Horizontally laminated sandstone. Mediumto
coarsegrained, some contorted bedding.
Moderately to well sorted.
Normally graded sandstone. Mediumto coarsegrained.

Gcmi
Gchi
Gcl

Sm
Sh
Sn
Fm
Fl
Cm
Vt

Interpretation

Massive siltstone. Thinly bedded.


Horizontally laminated siltstone.
Massive carbonate. Thinly bedded, gastropod fossils
Volcanic tuff. Quartz, euhedral biotite and sanidine,
wellsorted, horizontal laminations.

Range of Bed
Thickness

Highenergy stream flow

>2 mb

Traction bedload transport; longitudinal bars

>2 mb

Longitudinal bedforms, lag deposits

>2 mb

Transverse bar, channel fill

<50 cm

Rapid deposition, hyperconcentrated flow

<50 cm

Sheetflow, upper flow regime conditions

1030 cm

Channel fill, deposition by waning currents,


or turbidity currents
Suspension fallout
Suspension fallout
Carbonate precipitation in shallow lake
Pyroclastic ashfall deposition and subaqueous
suspension settling

1030 cm
110 cm
110 cm
1030 cm
7m

After Miall [1985, 1996], Ridgway and DeCelles [1993], Horton and Schmitt [1996], and Uba et al. [2005].
Conglomerate beds are commonly amalgamated making bed contacts difficult to identify.

subhorizontal Quaternary glacial deposits tens to hundreds


of m thick. The Lloclla Formation, divided into a Lower
Member and Upper Member, is exposed 15 km south of
Huaraz (Figure 2) in Quebrada Lloclla and Quebrada Telar
Huain with a total preserved thickness of 1300 m
(Figure 5). Exposures exist only in deeply incised ravines,
making lateral bedtobed correlation difficult, particularly
within coarsegrained intervals. The basal Lloclla tuff is
best exposed in Quebrada Lloclla (Figure 6a).
[16] Two stratigraphic sections measured in the Lloclla
Formation provide the basis for the definition of sedimen-

tary lithofacies and interpretations of depositional processes


(Figure 5 and Table 1). Eleven lithofacies are grouped into
four facies associations interpreted to record depositional
processes in different environments (Table 2).
3.1.1. Facies Association 1: Basal Volcanic Tuff
3.1.1.1. Description
[17] This facies association is limited to the Lower Member and is distinguished by a 7 m thick, dark gray tuff that
dips 25E toward the Cordillera Blanca normal fault
(Figures 3 and 6a). The basal Lloclla tuff is identified as a
separate volcanic lithofacies (Vt) because it is a distinct unit

Table 2. Facies Associations and Related Lithofacies


Facies Association

Lithofacies

Total Stratigraphic
Thickness

Interpretation and
Depositional Environment

Occurrence Within
Lloclla Formation

1. Basal volcanic tuff


2. Thin massive carbonate
and interbedded fine
grained sandstone and
siltstone
3. Thin pebble conglomerate
and mediumgrained
sandstone

Vt
Cm, Sh, Sn,
Fm, Fl

7m
<4 m (carbonate),
200 m (sandstone/
siltstone)

Ashfall, lacustrine
Lacustrine, distalfan delta

Lower Member
Lower Member

Gcl, Sh, Sn

300 m

Lower Member

4. Coarsegrained sandstone
and thick cobbleboulder
conglomerate

Sm, Sh, Gcm,


Gcmi, Gchi

<2 m (sandstone)
>600 m
(conglomerate)

Fluvial channel in periods


of high precipitation
(middistal streamdominated
alluvial fan)
Sandy braided channel
(midstreamdominated
alluvial fan); Gravelly
braided channel (proximal
streamdominated
alluvial fan)

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Upper Member

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restricted to the base of the section. It is comprised of well


sorted ash material with common horizontal laminations and
crystals of quartz and euhedral biotite and sanidine (Table 1).
3.1.1.2. Interpretation
[18] Facies association 1 is interpreted as the result of
volcanic ash accumulation in a lowenergy subaqueous
environment. Although preservation of primary volcanic ash
is indicative of little to no reworking, horizontal laminations
are suggestive of suspension settling in an offshore lacustrine environment [Horton and Schmitt, 1996; Garzione
et al., 2003]. Interpretation of a lacustrine setting is preferred over a fluvial overbank/floodplain environment due
to the lack of channelized facies and presence of interbedded
finegrained sandstone and siltstone of facies association 2
above and below the tuff.
3.1.2. Facies Association 2: Thin Massive Carbonate
Interbedded With FineGrained Sandstone and Siltstone
3.1.2.1. Description
[19] Facies association 2 is dominated by gastropod
bearing freshwater carbonate (Cm) occurring in 1030 cm
thick beds (Figures 5 and 6c). The beds are subplanar,
blocky, and massive. Interbedded with the carbonates are
mostly subplanar beds of wellsorted, finegrained sandstone (Sh) with occasional normal grading (Sn), and massive to laminated siltstone (Fm, Fl) (Figure 6b). Individual
clastic beds are relatively thin (several centimeters), persist
laterally for tens of meters, and exhibit nonerosional bases
defining broadly tabular bedding geometries. Although rare,
a few clastsupported conglomerates are present in 10
30 cm thick beds (see facies association 3).
3.1.2.2. Interpretation
[20] Deposition of facies association 2 is interpreted to
have occurred in a transitional zone between a nearshore
lacustrine environment and the subaerially exposed outer
fanfringe of a fandelta [e.g., Nemec and Steel, 1988;
Ridgway and DeCelles, 1993; Horton and Schmitt, 1996].
Characteristics of both subaqueous and subaerial environments are observed in this facies association. Interbedded
carbonate, sandstone, and conglomerate suggest that episodic clastic deposition alternated with quiet water conditions that permitted carbonate precipitation from lake waters.
It is likely that the carbonatebearing intervals, at the 200
400 m level in the measured section (Figure 5), were deposited
in a shallow water lacustrine environment. Normal grading
of sandstone is suggestive of deposition by turbidity currents.
Massive to very weakly laminated siltstones were deposited
by suspension fallout. Observed facies changes and rapid
coarsening above the 400 m level suggest that subaerial
fandelta processes, particularly sheetflow processes, were
responsible for transport of coarser sediments to more
distal part of the fandelta [Leeder, 1999].
3.1.3. Facies Association 3: Thin Pebble Conglomerate
and MediumGrained Sandstone
3.1.3.1. Description
[21] This facies association occurs throughout the Lower
Member. Sandy pebble conglomerate with lowangle stratification (Gcl), sandstone lenses, and basal scours alternate
with moderately sorted, mediumto coarsegrained sandstone with occasional normal grading (Sn) and horizontal
lamination (Sh). Sandstone beds are 1030 cm thick and the

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thickest conglomerate beds are 50 cm thick. Conglomerate


beds are commonly amalgamated, with bed contacts
becoming harder to distinguish upsection.
3.1.3.2. Interpretation
[22] Facies association 3 is interpreted to have been
deposited in the intermediate zone of a streamdominated
alluvial fan, with most deposition taking place in sandy and
gravelly bars within fluvial channels that reach the subaerial
fanfringe where it transitions to a fandelta [e.g., Miall,
1985, 1996; Ridgway and DeCelles, 1993; Leeder, 1999].
In places, particularly in the uppermost Lower Member,
conglomeratic sandstones with nonerosive bed contacts are
interpreted as the products of sheetfloods in more distal fan
environments [e.g., Blair and McPherson, 1994; Hampton
and Horton, 2007]. Observed coarsening trends within
conglomeratic packages may be the result of lateral migration of channels across the surface of the alluvial fan [Miall,
1977; Uba et al., 2005].
3.1.4. Facies Association 4: CoarseGrained Sandstone
and Thick CobbleBoulder Conglomerate
3.1.4.1. Description
[23] Facies association 4 includes the majority of the
Upper Member, beginning at the 600 m level (Figures 5, 6d,
and 6e). The Upper Member is defined by very thick beds of
clastsupported conglomerate that are predominantly imbricated (Gcmi) with a few erosional surfaces. These deposits
are interbedded with thin beds of lenticular coarsegrained
sandstone. An upwardcoarsening sequence is observed
within the cobbleboulder conglomerate. Mean clast size
ranges from 6 cm at the 500 m level to 14 cm at the top of
the section. Lithofacies include (1) clastsupported pebble
boulder conglomerates with imbrication (Gcmi), (2) massive,
nonimbricated, poorly sorted conglomerates with occasional
erosional scours (Gcm), (3) sandy, wellsorted, pebble conglomerate with horizontal stratification (Gchi), and (4) occasional lenses of coarsegrained sandstone (Sm, Sh). The
uppermost levels of the Upper Member are covered in angular
unconformity by Quaternary glacial deposits.
3.1.4.2. Interpretation
[24] Deposition of facies association 4 is attributed to
gravel bars in poorly defined lowsinuosity channels and
sediment gravity flows in the proximal sector of a stream
dominated alluvial fan [e.g., Miall, 1985; Ridgway and
DeCelles, 1993; Miall, 1996; Leeder, 1999]. The upsection
increase in mean clast size (Figure 5) suggests progradation
of the fan system toward distal regions. The uppermost basin
fill may have been deposited at the fan apex, where channelized and nonchannelized facies are closely associated.
Largescale upwardcoarsening sequences are observed in
prograding fans where depositional processes are increasingly proximal. Progradation may be caused by increasing
intensity of basinmargin faulting or an increasingly humid
climate causing higher runoff and sediment transport rates
[Leeder, 1999].
3.2. Stratigraphic Variations in Stratal Dip
[25] Edipping strata of the Lloclla Formation cap the
Etilted hanging wall of the Cordillera Blanca normal fault.
Stratal dip variations within the Lloclla Formation reveal four

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Table 3. Parameters for Sandstone Point Counts


Recalculated
Parameters

Symbol

Grain Categories

Qm
Qp
P

Monocrystalline quartz
Polycrystalline quartz
Plagioclase feldspar (includes
Na and Ca varieties)
Potassium feldspar
Microlitic volcanic grains
Lathwork volcanic grains
Felsic volcanic grains
Metamorphic lithic
grains (phyllite)
Mudstone
Carbonate

K
Lvm
Lvl
Lvf
Lm
Lsh
Lc

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QFL
Q = Qm + Qp
F=P+K
L = Lv + Ls + Lm
LmLvLs
Lm
Lv = Lvm + Lvl + Lvf
Ls = Lsh + Lc
QmPK
Qm
P
K

groups (Figure 5). In the Lower Member, dips range between


25NE and 15NE from the 0 to 250 m level (Figure 5). At
250 m, dips shallow abruptly to 10 and range from 5 to 10
up to 475 m, which marks the base of the Upper Member
(Figure 5). From 475 to 725 m, dips range from 7 to 15.
Above 725 m, bedding is not well defined in the thick,
massive conglomerate of the Upper Member, but dips
apparently steepen from 15 to 30 (Figure 5).
[26] Upsection variations in stratal dip are considered the
product of progressive syndepositional tilting during basin
evolution. The principal trend toward shallower dips
upsection is suggestive of a broad growth stratal package
related to eastdown tilting of the hanging wall during
deposition. Such basin infill patterns are commonly attributed to motion on a listric normal fault. However, an
upsection steepening of dips suggests further complexity
that may be related to variations in the geometry of master
or subsidiary faults [Gibbs, 1984].
3.3. Conglomerate and Sandstone Provenance
[27] The provenance of clastic sediment in the Lloclla
Formation was determined using sandstone compositional
data collected from petrographic analysis (point counts),
conglomerate compositional data from clast counts, and
sediment dispersal patterns from paleocurrent measurements. Most compositional data were collected from the
measured section at Quebrada Lloclla (Figure 5).
[28] Petrographic thin sections were cut from primarily
mediumgrained sandstone and stained for plagioclase and

potassium feldspar. Thirteen samples were counted using a


modified GazziDickinson method [Ingersoll et al., 1984].
Petrographic parameters (Table 3) and recalculated detrital
modes (Table 4) are based on methods described by
Ingersoll et al. [1984] and Dickinson [1985]. Recalculated
detrital modes are plotted on ternary diagrams (Figure 7)
depicting ratios of quartzfeldsparlithic fragments (QFL),
monocrystalline quartzplagioclaseKfeldspar (QmPK)
and metamorphicvolcanicsedimentary lithic fragments
(LmLvLs). The compositional data are divided into four
groups on the basis of stratigraphic m level, where the most
striking feature is the predominance of lithic grains, as
shown by the QFL diagram (Figure 7). The feldspar grains
are dominantly plagioclase feldspar, a trend visible in the
QmPK diagram (Figure 7). The LmLvLs diagram
reveals a moderate upsection trend of increasing volcanic
lithic grains (Figure 7). The mean sandstone compositions,
reported as percentages, are QFL (131374), QmPK
(51445), and LmLvLs (28666).
[29] Conglomerates are predominantly clast supported,
with some imbrication, and subrounded to rounded pebbles
and boulders (Figures 6d and 6e). Clast counts were conducted every 4050 m of stratigraphic section (Figure 5).
Each of 13 clast counts identified lithologies of 100125
individual clasts within 1 m2 of a single bed. Clast types
were grouped into metapelites of the Jurassic Chicama
Formation, volcanic rocks of the Tertiary Calipuy Formation, rhyolite probably from the Tertiary Calipuy Formation
(rather than the poorly consolidated Tertiary Yungay
ignimbrites), and granite from the Cordillera Blanca batholith. The lower 900 m of the measured section are dominated
by clasts of the Tertiary Calipuy Formation, with granite
clasts first appearing above 900 m (Figure 8).
[30] Paleocurrent data were collected every 50 m of
section as lithofacies allowed. Where clast imbrication was
observed, an average of 20 clast orientations was measured.
Rose diagrams for each site are plotted according to stratigraphic level (Figure 5). In addition, a total of 317 clast
measurements are plotted in a cumulative rose diagram that
reveals two paleoflow directions (Figure 8). The lower
900 m exhibit a mean paleoflow direction to the NW
(314). Above 900 m, flow direction changes to a more
WSW orientation (260) (Figures 5 and 8).
3.4. Age Constraints
[31] 40Ar/39Ar age results for the Yungay Formation and
basal tuff of the Lloclla Formation help define the onset of

Table 4. Recalculated Modal PointCount Data for Sandstones


QFL %

QmPK %

LmLvLs %

Sample Q. Lloclla:

Level (m) 938.5S,


7729.3W

Sampling
Elevation (m)

Qm

Lm

Lv

Ls

LL5
LL23
LL102
LL144
LL237
LL261
LL561
LL739

5
23
102
144
237
261
561
739

3369
3387
3466
3508
3601
3625
3925
4103

53
22
59
28
26
55
42
30

56
28
119
35
10
61
30
5

321
133
260
199
198
208
377
198

43
17
57
28
25
55
40
29

53
28
104
35
10
47
30
5

3
0
15
0
0
14
0
0

164
55
76
45
52
30
55
39

152
76
148
135
131
170
299
148

5
2
36
19
15
8
23
11

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into Cu foil packets. Five to eight milligrams of biotite


grains from each sample were irradiated with sanidine flux
monitors (Fish Canyon Tuff: nominal age of 27.8 0.5 Ma)
[Renne et al., 1994] at the Ford reactor, University of
Michigan for 45 h. Stepheating analyses were carried out at
the University of California, Los Angeles in a doublevacuum resistance furnace with a Ta crucible. Isotopic ratios
were measured using a VG1200 gas source automated mass
spectrometer. An inhouse data reduction program was used
to reduce the raw data and calculate ages. Reported ages
represent weighted mean ages with errors reported at the 1s
level. Weighted mean ages do not include uncertainties in
the J factor or decay constants, as appropriate for samples
analyzed in a single lab with the same flux monitors
[McDougall and Harrison, 1999].
[32] Three samples from the Yungay Formation provide
constraints on ignimbrite deposits in the northern Rio Santa
valley. 40Ar/39Ar analyses of biotite grains from Yungay
ignimbrites yield variable results (Figure 9 and Table 5).
One sample produced a relatively welldefined age spectrum that indicates an age of 7.5 0.2 Ma (Figure 9a). The
other two samples are characterized by somewhat irregular

Figure 7. Compositional ternary diagrams (QFL, Lm


LvLs, and QmPK) for 13 sandstone samples of the
Lloclla Formation (see Table 2). Four symbols correspond
to sampled stratigraphic level (Figure 5). Arrows indicate
upsection trends in detrital compositions.
hangingwall subsidence along the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault. Biotite grains from the Yungay ignimbrites
and basal Lloclla tuff were separated using magnetic separation techniques, handpicked for purity, and then packed

Figure 8. Paleocurrent and clast composition data for the


Lloclla Formation (a) below 900 m level and (b) above
900 m level. Paleocurrents show an abrupt change from
NW directed to WSW directed transport above the 900 m
stratigraphic level. Clast compositions record proportions
of JurassicCretaceous sedimentary rocks (JK), Tertiary
Calipuy volcaniclastic rocks (Tv), probable lower Calipuy
rhyolites (Tvr), and the appearance of Cordillera Blanca
granite (Tcb) above the 900 m level.

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Figure 9. 40Ar/39Ar age spectra for biotite grains from (ac) Yungay ignimbrites and (d) basal Lloclla
tuff of the Callejon de Huaylas basin. Reported ages represent weighted mean ages with 1s standard
errors.
age spectra (Figures 9b and 9c) that could reflect modest
amounts of excess argon [McDougall and Harrison, 1999].
Although all three samples yield weighted mean ages that
are indistinguishable, the latter samples yield relatively large
errors (8.0 1.0 and 8.7 1.6 Ma). For this reason, the age
of ignimbrite deposition is considered to have a clear record
at 7.5 Ma, with a possibility of slightly older ignimbrite
volcanism that could be as old as 810 Ma. These results are
broadly consistent with KAr biotite ages of 6.2 0.2 to
7.6 0.2 Ma reported for the Yungay ignimbrites [Cobbing
et al., 1981].
[33] In the Callejon de Huaylas basin, the base of the
Lloclla Formation (Quebrada Lloclla section; Figure 5)
contains a 78 m thick, dark gray tuff that dips 25E
toward the Cordillera Blanca normal fault (Figure 6a).
Bonnot [1984] reported a biotite KAr age of 5.4 Ma (no
errors reported) for the basal Lloclla tuff in Quebrada
Lloclla. New 40Ar/39Ar analyses of biotite yield a weighted
mean age of 5.4 0.1 Ma based on a welldefined plateau
age spectrum (Figure 9d), confirming the age of Bonnot

[1984]. Importantly, this 40Ar/39Ar age for the base of the


upwardcoarsening Lloclla Formation indicates that basin
subsidence, hence detachment faulting, commenced in this
region at 5.4 Ma.

4. Stable Isotope Methods and Results


4.1. Methods
[34] Lacustrine carbonates are porous, poorly indurated,
massive to laminated, very calcareous, with moderate
amounts of clay and organic matter. We examined each
sample under a stereoscopic microscope to identify representative material for sampling and to identify potential
diagenetic phases. All samples are micritic and show no
evidence of dissolution, sparry recrystallization, or cementation. Their high primary porosity is consistent with the
observation that they lack secondary diagenetic calcite.
Samples were crushed to a fine powder using a mortar and
pestle. Powdered samples were reacted with 30% H2O2 for
20 min to remove organic material prior to analysis.

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Table 5.

40

Ar/39Ar StepHeating Analytical Results

T (C)

40

37

Ar/39Ar

38

Ar/39Ar

500
71.604
0.1466
700
28.871
0.0870
770
3.297
0.0691
840
1.541
0.0673
900
2.273
0.0670
960
3.587
0.0686
1020
3.781
0.0667
1080
3.692
0.0683
1150
2.193
0.0664
1350
1.558
0.0655
Total gas age: 5.46 0.91 Ma
Weighted mean age: 5.40 0.05 Ma

Ar/39Ar
( 103)

36

Ar/39Ar
( 103)

39

Ar (mol)
( 1015)

S39Ar

40

Ar*

40

Ar*/39ArK

Basal Lloclla Tuff: Biotite (6.1 mg; J = 0.003587). 938.5S, 7729.3W


52.735
232.96
4.960
1.01
3.81
2.73
9.492
92.146
38.337
8.79
5.57
1.60
4.717
8.012
58.369
20.65
27.12
0.89
3.223
2.275
70.038
34.88
54.07
0.83
5.172
4.626
20.967
39.13
38.23
0.87
8.746
8.890
11.383
41.45
25.72
0.92
10.797
9.768
9.050
43.28
22.64
0.86
8.413
9.148
19.975
47.34
25.79
0.95
4.439
4.286
61.452
59.82
40.64
0.89
12.274
2.104
197.790
99.99
57.92
0.90

Yungay Ignimbrite 1: Biotite (6.1 mg; J = 0.003525). 857.5S, 7748.8W


500
61.391
0.1118
69.275
204.766
16.321
3.64
1.39
0.86
600
15.031
0.0816
248.674
48.336
20.929
8.31
4.89
0.74
700
7.164
0.0737
83.883
20.840
33.088
15.69
13.65
0.98
770
3.800
0.0671
29.028
8.875
33.991
23.28
30.04
1.15
840
3.634
0.0669
28.170
8.212
26.715
29.24
32.18
1.18
900
3.380
0.0686
19.942
7.258
40.904
38.37
35.47
1.20
960
3.424
0.0691
20.274
7.450
45.529
48.52
34.65
1.19
1050
2.452
0.0650
14.448
4.203
103.395
71.59
47.95
1.18
1150
1.740
0.0656
29.478
1.767
123.414
99.13
68.05
1.19
1350
8.037
0.0680
152.832
22.119
3.834
99.99
18.05
1.48
Total gas age: 7.23 0.61 Ma
Weighted mean age: 7.49 0.09 Ma
500
37.243
0.1099
600
7.827
0.0698
700
5.982
0.0687
770
5.511
0.0681
840
5.136
0.0668
900
5.164
0.0687
960
5.204
0.0702
1050
5.150
0.0690
1150
3.731
0.0658
1350
15.390
0.0403
Total gas age: 7.39 0.48 Ma
Weighted mean age: 8.02 0.99 Ma

Yungay Ignimbrite 2: Biotite (6.0 mg; J = 0.003525). 858.7S, 7748.3W


20.612
123.110
46.602
10.53
2.24
0.83
20.893
23.743
93.847
31.73
9.95
0.78
16.905
16.515
81.517
50.15
17.88
1.07
15.466
14.759
49.279
61.28
20.25
1.12
13.827
12.996
16.814
65.08
24.45
1.26
17.258
13.282
18.661
69.30
23.24
1.21
17.306
13.051
31.565
76.43
25.21
1.32
16.778
12.919
56.564
89.21
25.21
1.30
58.573
7.399
44.701
99.31
40.51
1.52
56.576
14.251
3.076
99.99
71.61
11.15

Yungay Ignimbrite 3: Biotite (6.0 mg; J = 0.003525). 859.8S, 7748.3W


500
154.813
0.1558
166.610
513.688
6.703
2.81
1.94
3.00
600
70.165
0.1091
117.649
225.455
13.872
8.62
5.01
3.52
700
30.565
0.0869
76.402
97.676
46.380
28.05
5.48
1.68
770
14.914
0.0729
53.668
45.733
24.587
38.35
9.18
1.37
840
31.105
0.0801
84.061
99.716
12.043
43.39
5.18
1.61
900
34.693
0.0919
85.951
110.652
18.040
50.95
5.67
1.97
960
21.457
0.0826
72.663
65.931
19.171
58.98
9.06
1.95
1050
11.241
0.0751
60.406
32.492
46.913
78.63
14.33
1.61
1150
3.011
0.0691
73.044
6.202
48.715
99.04
38.09
1.15
1350
14.617
0.0158
26.338
13.110
2.297
99.99
72.07
10.71
Total gas age: 11.39 1.28 Ma
Weighted mean age: 8.69 1.54 Ma

[35] Water d 18O and D/H and carbonate d 18O and d13C
were measured on a Thermo Electron Corporation Delta
plus XP mass spectrometer in continuous flow mode at the
University of Rochester. Water d18O was measured using an
automated Gasbench II CO2H2O equilibration unit. The
isotope ratio was calculated using internal lab standards
calibrated using VSMOW (Vienna Standard Mean Ocean
Water) and VSLAP (Vienna Standard Light Antarctic
Precipitation). Precision is better than 0.08 for the

s40/39

Age
(Ma)

sAge

1.10
0.29
0.04
0.02
0.07
0.14
0.17
0.10
0.03
0.01

17.79
10.49
5.84
5.45
5.70
6.05
5.62
6.23
5.83
5.90

7.15
1.95
0.31
0.17
0.48
0.96
1.14
0.65
0.21
0.08

0.98
0.17
0.08
0.07
0.08
0.05
0.05
0.02
0.02
0.37

5.43
4.68
6.22
7.28
7.47
7.64
7.56
7.48
7.54
9.40

6.19
1.11
0.53
0.45
0.52
0.31
0.30
0.15
0.10
2.35

0.21
0.06
0.05
0.06
0.10
0.10
0.03
0.05
0.04
0.42

5.29
4.95
6.80
7.10
8.02
7.66
8.35
8.25
9.62
69.56

1.35
0.40
0.30
0.39
0.66
0.60
0.19
0.33
0.28
2.56

1.36
0.23
0.24
0.12
0.35
0.26
0.25
0.10
0.04
0.54

18.98
22.25
10.62
8.70
10.23
12.48
12.34
10.22
7.31
66.87

8.55
1.45
1.53
0.75
2.24
1.67
1.58
0.62
0.27
3.34

d18O values of water. D/H was measured using a Thermo


Electron TC/EA peripheral and a GCPAL autosampler.
Approximately 200 nL of sample water was injected into
the TC/EA during three successive injections. The reactor
was set at a temperature of 1450C and the GC oven was set
at 90C. The average of three injections indicates a 1s error
of 1.5 for dD. We report the average of six ratios (two
separate runs), that yielded 1s errors of 1.4. d 18O and
d13C of carbonates were measured using the Gasbench II

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peripheral device. Powdered samples were reacted with


phosphoric acid to liberate CO2. The isotope ratio was
calculated using repeated measurements of three inhouse
standards calibrated using NBS19 and NBS18. The 1s
errors were 0.1 for d 18O and 0.05 for d 13C.

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4.2. Oxygen and Hydrogen Isotopes of Modern


Surface Waters
[36] Stable isotope paleoaltimetry was employed to evaluate surface uplift in the Cordillera Blanca. This method is
based on analysis of stable oxygen isotopes (16O and 18O)
in carbonates precipitated from surface waters. The d 18O
values of meteoric water (d18Omw) vary systematically with
elevation, providing a means to reconstruct paleoelevation
using d 18O values of paleowaters [Chamberlain and Poage,
2000; Garzione et al., 2000b; Rowley et al., 2001; Blisniuk
et al., 2005]. As vapor masses ascend the flank of a mountain
range, they expand and cool, causing rainout of heavier
isotopes, thus producing lower d18Omw values at progressively higher altitudes [Gonfiantini et al., 2001; Vuille et al.,
2003]. Rayleigh distillation is considered to exert a primary
control on the decrease in d18Omw of meteoric water at higher
altitudes in the Andes [Gonfiantini et al., 2001; Vimeux et al.,
2005; Rowley and Garzione, 2007; Sturm et al., 2007] with
the caveat that changes in climate that alter the elevation
temperature gradient, seasonality of rainfall amount, or atmospheric circulation may affect the isotopic composition of
source moisture or the isotopic lapse rate [e.g., Vimeux et al.,
2005; Sturm et al., 2007; Ehlers and Poulsen, 2009; Poulsen
et al., 2010]. Stable isotope paleoelevation reconstructions
are based on the observation that carbonates that precipitated
from waters originating at higher altitudes yield more negative d18O values, as demonstrated by studies of both modern
and ancient lacustrine and paleosol carbonates in contractional mountain belts [e.g., Drummond et al., 1993; Garzione
et al., 2000a; Rowley and Currie, 2006; Hoke et al., 2009].
[37] Paleoelevation can be estimated from oxygen isotope
compositions of carbonates using a locally determined d18O
versus altitude gradient and making reasonable assumptions
about the past climate from available paleoclimate indicators
[Rowley and Garzione, 2007]. However, additional considerations are required because other factors may also influence the d 18O values of carbonate, including evaporative
effects, diagenesis, and the temperature of calcite precipitation
[Garzione et al., 2004]. For accurate calibration of the local
d18O versus altitude gradient, it is also necessary to collect
modern water samples from a considerable range of elevations.
[38] In this study, modern water samples were collected
in July 2005 from the <2 m wide by <30 cm deep trunk
stream in Quebrada Lloclla and analyzed for d18O values
(Figure 10a). The d18O (VSMOW) values show a limited
Figure 10. Stable isotope results for modern stream waters
of Quebrada Lloclla and lacustrine carbonates of Lloclla
Formation. (a) Oxygen isotope results for modern stream
waters showing more negative d18O values at higher elevation. (b) Comparative plot of oxygen and hydrogen isotope
results for modern waters, showing d18O values versus dD
(deuterium) values and resulting local meteoric water line
(LMWL) relative to global meteoric water line (GMWL).
(c) Comparative plot of oxygen and carbon isotope results
for lacustrine carbonates, showing d18 O values versus
d13C values. Arrow denotes upsection trend toward more
negative d18O values. Sample labels correspond to stratigraphic m level (Figure 5).

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Table 6. Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Dataa


Sample
Name
LL182C
LL197C
LL199C
LL261C
LL262C
LL263C
LL315C
LL353C
LL405C
LL490C

18

13

Description

Sampling
Elevation
(m)

Stratigraphic
Level
(m)

d O
(VPDB)
()

d C
(VPDB)
()

micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite
micrite

3546
3561
3563
3625
3626
3627
3679
3717
3769
3854

182
197
199
261
262
263
315
353
405
490

13.9
11.6
11.0
14.0
13.2
17.3
16.4
15.5
14.7
17.8

7.2
6.7
5.9
2.1
2.6
10.6
9.4
6.2
6.9
8.0

a
Quebrada Lloclla: 938.5S, 7729.3W. Precision is better than 0.05
for d 13C and 0.1 for d 18O Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite (VPDB).

range between 11.5 and 13, with the most negative


values observed at the highest elevations. The water samples
were collected from the maximum elevation range of the
Quebrada Lloclla stream, from the headwaters to the downstream confluence with the Rio Santa. Although this data
set constrains modern surface water compositions along a
single trunk river between 3250 and 3900 m elevation, the
lack of samples from individual tributary streams at different elevations and the small 650 m range in sample
elevations limit robust estimates of the local d 18O versus
altitude gradient over a large range of elevations. Nevertheless, the d18O values are more negative with increasing
elevation (Figure 10a), as predicted for modern stream
waters.
[39] Hydrogen and oxygen isotopes of water are widely
used as tracers of hydrological processes involving precipitation and interactions between groundwater and surface
water [e.g., Gibson et al., 2005]. The dD (deuterium) and
d18O composition of global precipitation has been shown to
vary systematically and define a uniform relationship in
dDd18O space called the global meteoric water line
(GMWL) [Gammons et al., 2006, and references therein]. It
is recognized that the relationship between dD and d 18O
values of precipitation can vary regionally, necessitating the
measurement of a local meteoric water line (LMWL) for
comparison. The slope of the LMWL can depart from that of
the GMWL due to evaporation under low humidity conditions and seasonal temperature variations. For modern
waters of the Quebrada Lloclla, the slope of the LMWL is
considerably lower than the GMWL (Figure 10b), suggesting evaporation under low relative humidity affected these
waters. River waters were sampled in July 2005 during the
dry season. At rainfall of <1cm/mo for June and July, as
compared to 1112 cm/mo in the summer rainy season1,
July represents the driest month of the year. Low rainfall
rates associated with the season of sampling may account
for the relatively positive d 18O values and the low slope of
the LMWL observed in stream waters.
4.3. Oxygen Isotopes of Lloclla Formation Carbonates
[40] Isotopic compositions of lacustrine carbonates commonly reveal a systematic correlation between carbon and
oxygen isotopes [Talbot, 1990]. Such isotopic covariance

TC6007

can be attributed to closed basin conditions, recognizing that


diagenetic alteration, mixing, and temperature variations
may skew d18O and d 13C values. In general, more positive
values of d 18O in lacustrine carbonates are likely associated
with basin closure and an increase in the degree of evaporation [Talbot, 1990; Drummond et al., 1995]. If the linear
correlation coefficient (R2) for covariance between d 13C and
d18O is >0.8, the carbonates were likely precipitated from a
lake in a basin that experienced long periods of internal
drainage. Moderately high covariance coefficients (R2
0.60.7) suggest periods of extended residence times in
lakes that existed in basins that were closed periodically
[Talbot, 1990].
[41] Although the Callejon de Huaylas basin is dominated
by conglomerate, eight levels of lacustrine carbonate were
sampled within the Quebrada Lloclla section (Figure 5).
Measured values of d13C and d 18O are depicted on a single
plot, with sample numbers corresponding to stratigraphic m
level (Figure 10c and Table 6). The samples reveal d18O
(VPDB) values ranging from 13.2 to 17.8. Assuming these carbonates were precipitated at temperatures similar to the modern summertime mean temperature of 12C,
when lake carbonates are most likely to precipitate [Duston
et al., 1986; Effler et al., 1987], we calculate paleolake
water compositions of 13.6 to 18.2(VSMOW) using
the temperature dependent fractionation equation of Kim
and ONeil [1997]. The estimated lake water values are
more negative than the d18O values of modern stream waters
of 11.6 to 12.9. In lacustrine carbonate samples, the
high degree of covariance (R2 = 0.61) between d13C and
d18O values is consistent with a lacustrine setting experiencing intermittent basin closure, possibly suggesting relatively high rates of evaporation at higher elevations. A
moderate upsection decrease in d 18O values from d18O
(VPDB) = 11 to 14 in the lower part of the section to
14.7 to 17.8 in the upper part of the section (Table 6)
is consistent with, but does not require, increased elevation
in the source area with time. Likely alternatives include
increasingly open lake conditions upsection or a climatic
shift involving changes in the temperature of carbonate
precipitation and/or rainfall amount. The isotopic composition of rainfall in tropical settings shows little to no correlation with air temperature but varies more as a function of
rainfall amount and vapor mass history [Rozanski et al.,
1993; Vimeux et al., 2005]. Assuming similar to modern
surface water compositions would require that lake carbonates precipitated under cooler climate conditions. For example, if the most positive lake carbonates [d 18O(VPDB) =
13] reflect precipitation from the most positive surface
waters [d18O(VSMOW) = 11.5], then this would require a
temperature of carbonate formation of 7C. Although temperature proxy records and modeling of late Miocene climate in this region are lacking, the observation of warmer
global climate in the late Miocene relative to today [e.g.,
Zachos et al., 2001] suggests that 5C cooler temperatures
of carbonate precipitation is an unlikely cause of the discrepancy between modern waters and paleolake carbonates.
A more likely scenario is that paleolake carbonates reflect
lower d 18O values of local meteoric water. An increase in
the amount of precipitation or an increase in convective

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Table 7. Oxygen Isotopic Data and Elevation Information for Sampled Modern Watersa
Sample Name
LL3280
LL3301
LL3396
LL3499
LL3585
LL3684
LL3787
LL3893
Drainage Basin
b

Rurec

Stream
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada
Quebrada

Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla
Lloclla

Sampling Elevation (m)


3280
3301
3396
3499
3585
3684
3787
3893

Area (km2)

Sampling Season

176.2

July 2005

Sampling Location
S0938.583,
S0938.485,
S0938.202,
S0937.322,
S0937.918,
S0938.029,
S0938.068,
S0938.239,

W07729.300
W07729.083
W07728.554
W07728.298
W07727.961
W07727.685
W07727.413
W07727.200

d 18O (VSMOW) ()

dD (VSMOW) ()

11.6
11.8
12.3
12.6
12.7
12.7
12.8
12.9

92.9
92.3
94.7
95.1
93.8
94.7
95.0
94.3

Data for each location appear in order from lowest to highest sampling elevation. Elevations and locations were determined using a Garmin eTrex GPS
unit. Precision is better than 0.08 for d18O and 1.4 for dD. VSMOW, Vienna standard mean ocean water.
b
Giovanni [2007].

activity upstream of atmospheric flow provide more likely


explanations of the lower d18O values of local rainfall in
the late Miocene [Vimeux et al., 2005; Bony et al., 2008;
Risi et al., 2008]. Another potential source of the discrepancy between paleolake water and modern stream water is
that modern stream waters appear to have experienced
evaporation. As discussed in section 5.2, these waters were
sampled during the dry season and are likely to reflect
higher d18O values than precipitation during the summer
rainy season. For a more accurate comparison of local
meteoric water and paleolake water composition, modern
streams should be sampled just following the summer
rainy season (JanuaryMarch). (Temperature and rainfall
information for Chupaca, Peru, the nearest weather station
of similar elevation to the Callejon de Huaylas basin
(elevation = 3350 m) (www.weatherbase.com). Summertime mean temperature reflects the modern monthly mean
temperature at Chupaca for the warmest 2 months (October
and November).) To assess paleoelevation, we compare
isotopic values of modern stream water (Figure 10a and
Table 7) to those from uppermost Miocene carbonates of
the Lloclla Formation (Figure 10c). Lloclla carbonates were
deposited several Ma prior to the onset of regional glaciation at 1.4 Ma [Smith et al., 2005]. Given the extensive
Quaternary glaciation in the Cordillera Blanca, the modern
d18O values of stream waters sourced from snowmelt and
glaciers [e.g., Vimeux et al., 2009] should be more negative
relative to ancient lacustrine waters from the same elevation. Furthermore, evaporative effects common to partially
closed lake systems should result in enrichment in the d 18O
values of lake water. Both of these effects would tend to
result in higher d18O values of paleolake waters relative to
modern stream waters, leading to an underestimation of
paleoelevation. The most negative paleolake water d18O
values (18) from the uppermost Miocene Lloclla carbonates that likely exhibit the least evaporation are significantly more negative than modern stream waters (d18O
values = 11.6 to 12.9 sampled during the dry season
(Figures 10a and 10c), but similar in isotopic composition
to ice cores in Peru that show d 18O values between 16.5
and 20 [Vimeux et al., 2009]. The similarity with
modern ice core compositions suggests that surface waters

reaching the lacustrine systems of the Callejon de Huaylas


basin (Lloclla Formation) during the latest Miocene originated from elevations at least as high as the current elevation of the Cordillera Blanca.

5. Discussion
5.1. Basin Evolution
[42] Lithofacies, paleocurrents, and detrital provenance of
the Lloclla Formation help delineate the depositional history
of the Callejon de Huaylas basin in the hanging wall of the
Cordillera Blanca detachment fault. 40Ar/39Ar results and
upsection variations in stratal dip in the basin fill further
constrain the timing and style of fault displacement.
[43] The Lloclla Formation contains an upwardcoarsening, 1300 m thick succession (Figure 5) that represents
progradation of a streamdominated alluvial fan into a
lacustrine fandelta system. Progradation is marked by an
upsection transition from lacustrine mudstones, and localized carbonates, to thick cobbleboulder conglomerates with
imbricated, rounded clasts. Paleocurrent data (Figures 5 and
8) for most of the formation indicate sediment dispersal to
the NW in an axial to oblique direction relative to the NNW
trending Cordillera Blanca. Sandstone and conglomerate
provenance data (Figures 5 and 8) indicate a source region
dominated by Tertiary volcanic rocks with increased input
of sedimentary grains from the Cretaceous section and
metasedimentary grains from the Jurassic interval. A considerable provenance change was recorded at the 900 m
level of the Lloclla Formation. Above this level, the
appearance of granitic clasts and a shift toward more WSW
directed flow suggest transverse sediment dispersal away
from an uplifted footwall in which erosion had breached the
Cordillera Blanca granitic batholith. This compositional
trend indicates that the batholith was not a dominant source
during most basin accumulation, in contrast to the modern
drainages dominated by footwall granite clasts. Although
significant variability characterizes the paleocurrents, conglomerate clast lithologies, and sandstone compositions
(Figures 5, 7, and 8), the broad stratigraphic pattern defined
by these data sets suggests that deeper levels of the footwall
contributed greater proportions of sediment with time. We

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interpret this unroofing pattern as the product of continued


footwall exhumation during protracted west down motion
on the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault (Figure 3).
[44] The timing of slip is constrained by the hangingwall
subsidence history. At the basins type locality (Quebrada
Lloclla; Figure 2), a tuff at the base of the Lloclla Formation
yielded a 40Ar/39Ar biotite age of 5.4 0.1 Ma (Figure 9d).
This age is important because an unconformity at the base of
the formation indicates the region underwent erosion after
middle Miocene termination of deposition in the Calipuy
Formation. Therefore, the basal Lloclla tuff represents a
fundamental temporal shift toward deposition that marks the
onset of faultinduced subsidence. We attribute initial
hangingwall subsidence of the Callejon de Huaylas basin at
5.4 Ma to the onset of extension and detachment faulting in
the Cordillera Blanca.
[45] Although local variations affect stratal dip within the
Lloclla Formation, systematic measurements record dip variations that may be linked to the subsurface geometry of the
Cordillera Blanca fault. Initial dips of 1525 are abruptly
overlain by shallow dips (510) at 250490 m, and then
gradually steepen (1530) above 725 m (Figure 5). Dip
shallowing at 250 m is consistent with growth strata deposited
synchronously with hangingwall tilting, most likely along a
listric normal fault. Dip steepening above 490 m (Figure 5),
although contrary to simple models of hangingwall rollover,
may indicate a rampflat fault geometry rather than a smooth
curvilinear fault plane at depth [e.g., Gibbs, 1984].
5.2. BasinForming Mechanisms
[46] Although Quaternary glacial deposits cover large
areas of the Callejon de Huaylas basin, the elongate supradetachment basin exhibits NWSE differences suggestive of
important alongstrike variations in basin evolution and, by
inference, the slip history along the 200 km length of the
Cordillera Blanca detachment fault. The southern Rio Santa
valley contains the basins type section in the form of the
dominantly conglomeratic Lloclla Formation. This 1300 m
thick succession unconformably overlies volcanic rocks of
the Eocene to middle Miocene Calipuy Formation. In contrast, the northern Rio Santa valley contains an up to 800 m
thick succession of the upper Miocene (7.5 Ma) Yungay
ignimbrites, which unconformably overlaps the Jurassic
Cretaceous section. The Yungay ignimbrites are capped by
glacial deposits, with no evidence of an intervening Lloclla
Formation. Two possible models are presented to account
for these alongstrike discrepancies within the hanging wall
of the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault.
[47] In the first model (Figure 11a), the normal fault acts as
a single segment with one tip pinned and the other free to
propagate. As the fault lengthens, the basin increases in
length, width, and depth. Cumulative slip is greatest in
locations closer the pinned fault tip and decreases in the
direction of propagation. The result is a broadly synclinal
basin geometry in longitudinal section that increases in amplitude and wavelength as the fault tip propagates [Schlische
and Anders, 1996]. The active depocenter of the basin,
defined by the location of maximum subsidence at any given
time, migrates in the same direction as the propagating fault

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tip. The location of the active depocenter precedes the location of maximum cumulative fill thickness (Figure 11a). In
addition, younger sediments will be deposited over a larger
surface area than older sediments and will onlap onto older
strata on the trailing end of the migrating depocenter.
Ultimately, a longitudinal cross section will show stacking or
shingling of progressively broader stratigraphic units such
that the oldest units are exposed at the surface near the origination of slip but are buried by younger sediments farther
along strike in the direction of depocenter migration and
faulttip propagation.
[48] In the second model (Figure 11b), multiple fault segments [e.g., Dawers et al., 1993; Densmore et al., 2004] that
do not overlap in map view are each associated with their own
isolated sedimentary basin. In the simple case of two faults,
each fault propagates in both directions, with the oldest units
restricted to the center of each subbasin (Figure 11b). As
displacement accrues on the two fault segments, the fault tips
propagate toward each other. Once the fault tips merge, new
units are deposited basinwide, thinning toward an intrabasin
high. With further slip, the fault system now propagates as a
single segment and strata begin to thicken toward the basin
center [Schlische and Anders, 1996].
[49] Both models provide viable explanations for the
alongstrike (NWSE) variations in the hanging wall of the
Cordillera Blanca fault, notably the absence or presence of
two major units, the Yungay ignimbrites and coarsegrained
fill of the Lloclla Formation. We tentatively favor the first
model involving a single fault segment that propagates to
the SE because it can help account for the greater topographic relief and structural relief in the northern Rio Santa
valley and Cordillera Blanca. However, a more definitive
conclusion awaits more detailed information on spatial
variations in fault displacement and basin thickness.
5.3. Modes of Synconvergent Extension
[50] The Cordillera Blanca is critical to understanding
largescale hinterland extension in convergent retroarc
orogenic belts such as the Andes. Numerous hypotheses
have been advanced to explain the driving mechanism(s) of
extension in the Peruvian hinterland. Possible explanations
include extensional collapse of thickened crust [Dalmayrac and
Molnar, 1981; Sebrier et al., 1988a, 1988b; Mercier et al.,
1992], normal reactivation of a preexisting foldthrust structure [Doser, 1987; Schwartz, 1988; Bellier et al., 1991], strike
slip partitioning along an obliquely convergent margin
[McNulty et al., 1998], kinematic linkages to flatslab subduction of the oceanic Nazca plate [McNulty and Farber,
2002], or thermal weakening and failure due to pluton
emplacement [Petford and Atherton, 1992]. Our sedimentologic, provenance, and 40Ar/39Ar results on the timing and
mode of extensional basin development and our stable isotope
data for basin fill offers new insights that bear on this problem.
[51] The structural and stratigraphic patterns of basin
evolution in the Cordillera Blanca are compatible with
classic models for supradetachment basins [e.g., Friedmann
and Burbank, 1995]. The shallow fault dip (<40), considerable dipslip displacement (>10 km), relatively limited
basinfill thickness (<1.5 km), footwalldominated sediment

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Figure 11. Schematic models of basin evolution linked to growth of the Cordillera Blanca normal fault.
At left, a generalized map depicts fill of the Callejon de Huaylas basin, the bold black trace of the Cordillera Blanca normal fault (CBNF), the blue trace of the Nflowing Rio Santa, and the site of the Lloclla
Formation measured section. Y = Yungay ignimbrite; Qm = Quaternary glacial deposits. (a) Model of a
single, southwardpropagating fault segment inducing southward migration of the basin depocenter.
White bar denotes Lloclla measured section. (b) Model of two propagating fault segments inducing
growth of two isolated extensional basins that coalesce into a single larger basin. Gray bar on map
and cross section separates hypothesized fault segments.

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supply, and existence of footwall mylonites are consistent


with detachmentstyle faulting during largemagnitude
extension. For the Cordillera Blanca, these criteria are
inconsistent with deep transtensional (pullapart) basins [e.g.,
Mann et al., 1983], which are uncommon throughout the
Andean hinterland [Horton, 2010]. In addition, the large
displacement and existence of additional extensional structures in hinterland regions beyond the Cordillera Blanca
[e.g., Doser, 1987; Deverchere et al., 1989; Bellier et al., 1991]
suggest that extension is not governed by the local thermal
effects of late Miocene emplacement of the Cordillera Blanca
batholith. More generally, although lowangle normal faulting
is commonly linked to broad regions of intercontinental
extension such as the Aegean and Basin and Range provinces
[e.g., Coney, 1987; Buck, 1991], we consider this detachment
mode of extension to be equally applicable to deformation and
basin growth in zones of synconvergent extension [e.g.,
Robinson et al., 2004; Kapp et al., 2008].
[52] Models linking extension in the Cordillera Blanca to
plateboundary processes rely on the timing of ridge collision and flatslab subduction. For example, McNulty and
Farber [2002] suggest that the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault may have been triggered by kinematic coupling
with the shallowly subducted Nazca Ridge. Two recent
reconstructions of the subduction history along the Peru
trench [Hampel, 2002; Rosenbaum et al., 2005] show that
the buoyant Nazca Ridge migrated southward since initial
collision with the Peruvian margin in the middle Miocene.
Although there are minor differences, both reconstructions
indicate that the subducted continuation of the Nazca Ridge
passed beneath the Cordillera Blanca region by 1510 Ma
[Hampel, 2002; Rosenbaum et al., 2005]. Our estimate of
initial extension at 5.4 Ma considerably postdates the timing
of ridge passage and slab flattening beneath the Cordillera
Blanca. Moreover, independent thermochronological evidence for rapid cooling in the Cordillera Blanca and adjacent
Cordillera Huayhuash [Garver et al., 2003, 2005; Perry and
Garver, 2004; Giovanni, 2007], presumed to partially reflect
faultinduced exhumation, consistently show fastest cooling
over the past 5 Ma.
[53] Most previous models suggest that surface uplift of
the Cordillera Blanca was driven by activation of normal
faulting and accompanying footwall rebound. However,
considerations of gravitational body forces in a previously
thickened crust [Dalmayrac and Molnar, 1981; Suarez et al.,
1983; Molnar and LyonCaen, 1988; Sebrier et al., 1988b;
Mercier et al., 1992] suggest that extensional collapse yields
little to no change in footwall elevation during the transition
from preextensional to synextensional conditions. Oxygen
isotope paleoaltimetry, when considered in light of possible
climate change, diagenesis, and other influences, has the
potential to test such predictions about paleoelevation. For
the Cordillera Blanca, oxygen isotope values for lacustrine
carbonates in uppermost Miocene basin fill are considerably
more negative than modern stream waters (Figures 10a
and 10c). Barring a significant warming of the regional climate, which would contradict recent studies [e.g., Zachos
et al., 2001; Ehlers and Poulsen, 2009; Poulsen et al., 2010],
these data suggest that the latest Miocene surface waters of
the Callejon de Huaylas basin originated from elevations

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similar to, or possibly higher than, modern elevations of


the Cordillera Blanca. Protracted highaltitude conditions in
the Cordillera Blanca for the past 5.4 Ma appear most
consistent with models of orogenic collapse. In considering
why Cenozoic largemagnitude extension did not affect other
high regions of the Andes, we note that the Cordillera Blanca
contains perhaps the greatest concentration of topography
>5 km altitude in the orogenic belt. Nevertheless, a uniformly
high region does not rule out the possibility of extensional
reactivation of preexisting thrust structures in the Cordillera
Blanca. Collectively, these findings suggest that a thickened
crust with significant thrustgenerated topography constituted a necessary condition for synconvergent hinterland
extension in the Cordillera Blanca, similar to models of orogenic collapse for the North American Cordillera [Coney and
Harms, 1984; Coney, 1987].

6. Conclusions
[54] 1. In the Andean hinterland of Peru, the Callejon de
Huaylas supradetachment basin is located on the hanging
wall of the active Cordillera Blanca normal fault, a WSW
dipping, lowangle normal fault parallel to the regional
strike of active foldthrust structures farther east. The Cordillera Blanca and corresponding supradetachment basin
represent a key example of active, detachmentstyle synconvergent extension in a modern retroarc hinterland.
[55] 2. Stratigraphy, sedimentology, paleocurrents, conglomerate clast compositions, and sandstone petrographic
data help constrain the late Cenozoic evolution of the
Callejon de Huaylas basin. The upper MiocenePliocene
Lloclla Formation (1300 m thick) records westward progradation of a streamdominated alluvial fan and lacustrine
fandelta system away from the footwall. Paleocurrents and
compositional provenance data record a shift in sediment
dispersal patterns from NW directed to west directed at the
900 m level. Above this level, the appearance of conglomerate clasts of the upper Miocene Cordillera Blanca
batholith indicates initial exposure of the batholith during
continued exhumation of the footwall of the Cordillera
Blanca detachment fault.
[56] 3. The onset of hangingwall subsidence is constrained by a new 40Ar/39Ar biotite age of 5.4 0.1 Ma from
the base of the Lloclla Formation. Initial subsidence of the
supradetachment basin at 5.4 Ma is attributed to the onset
of extension along the Cordillera Blanca detachment fault.
New 40Ar/39Ar ages from the Yungay ignimbrites in the
northern basin reveal an earlier magmatic event between
10 and 7.5 Ma, probably related to late Miocene
emplacement of the Cordillera Blanca batholith.
[57] 4. Upsection variations in stratal dip within the
Lloclla Formation define a hangingwall growth stratal
package indicative of active extensional faulting during
basin filling. The Jurassic Chicama Formation serves as an
approximate offset marker that yields an estimated minimum of 1215 km of normal slip on the Cordillera Blanca
detachment fault. Two alternative models invoking either a
single propagating fault segment or multiple linking fault
segments can help account for alongstrike variations in

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fault evolution that helped dictate the spatially variable


accumulation histories within the supradetachment basin.
[58] 5. Oxygen isotope values from lacustrine carbonates
in the Lloclla Formation indicate similar or more negative
values than modern water, suggesting comparable (or possibly higher) elevations in the Cordillera Blanca during
latest Miocene time. Protracted highaltitude conditions for
the past 5.4 Ma are consistent with models of orogenic
collapse that account for the existence of synconvergent
hinterland extension in the Cordillera Blanca.

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[59] Acknowledgments. This work was initiated as part of a Ph.D.


dissertation at the University of California, Los Angeles by M.K.G. under
the supervision of B.K.H. Partial funding was provided by a National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship (M.K.G.), a Geological Society of America research grant (M.K.G.), and NSF grants EAR
0201937 (B.M. and B.K.H.) and EAR0908518 (C.N.G. and B.K.H.).
The manuscript was improved by constructive reviews of David Barbeau,
Nadine McQuarrie, Todd Ehlers, and an anonymous associate editor. We
appreciate beneficial discussions with Dan Farber, Stu Gilder, Bob Gillis,
Mark Harrison, Paul Hoskin, Ray Ingersoll, Mick McRivette, Alex
Robinson, and An Yin.

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