Giovanni Et Al 2010 - Cordillera Blanca PDF
Giovanni Et Al 2010 - Cordillera Blanca PDF
Giovanni Et Al 2010 - Cordillera Blanca PDF
1029/2010TC002666, 2010
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
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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
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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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].
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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Description
Gcm
Gcmi
Gchi
Gcl
Sm
Sh
Sn
Fm
Fl
Cm
Vt
Interpretation
Range of Bed
Thickness
>2 mb
>2 mb
>2 mb
<50 cm
<50 cm
1030 cm
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.
Lithofacies
Total Stratigraphic
Thickness
Interpretation and
Depositional Environment
Occurrence Within
Lloclla Formation
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
<2 m (sandstone)
>600 m
(conglomerate)
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Upper Member
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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
QmPK %
LmLvLs %
Sample Q. Lloclla:
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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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
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Table 5.
40
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
[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
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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).
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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
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].
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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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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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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