Pedro Reyes , Mauricio Valarezo , Santiago Ramos , Sandra Procel , Elizabeth Lasluisa , Ana Cabero , Felipe Lima
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Models of fold growth involve simple mechanisms of tip propagation or an increase in amplitude and breadth by maintaining the tip fixed. Whatever the growth mechanism, the drainage network adapts to the newly created tectonic slopes. Lithological resistance to erosion, as well as climate and uplift rates, exerts a control on bedrock incision rates and, therefore, on whether a transverse river maintains its course or finally is deflected. In southeastern Ecuador, the northernmost end of the Cutucú Uplift corresponds to the Macuma anticline, a north-plunging periclinal fold that encroaches into the Amazonian plain. The east-flowing Macuma River exhibits a pronounced narrow curvature entrenched within the anticline structure. Morphometric analysis including river profiling, across-valley geometry, hypsometric-integral data, and small-scale saddle features such as wind gaps, evidence an antecedent east-flowing straight water gap in the initial stages of fold growth. Nevertheless, the gradual exposure of a rock-resistant core has deflected the Macuma River but only in its middle course while the general west-east trend is maintained. Consequently, the landscape resulted in a linked pair of elongated inner ridges bound by a horseshoe morphostructure. Through detailed geomorphic analysis, a complex history of lateral propagation has been established for the Macuma anticline. Thus, behind the frontal nose, an actively propagating core tip attained a point where it became fixed while the anticline began to grow in amplitude and breadth. Finally, a renewed phase of tip propagation encroached into the adjacent northern Amazonian plain and constructed a narrow anticlinal nose which is currently preserved as a pristine non-dissected surface.
期刊介绍:
Papers must have a regional appeal and should present work of more than local significance. Research papers dealing with the regional geology of South American cratons and mobile belts, within the following research fields:
-Economic geology, metallogenesis and hydrocarbon genesis and reservoirs.
-Geophysics, geochemistry, volcanology, igneous and metamorphic petrology.
-Tectonics, neo- and seismotectonics and geodynamic modeling.
-Geomorphology, geological hazards, environmental geology, climate change in America and Antarctica, and soil research.
-Stratigraphy, sedimentology, structure and basin evolution.
-Paleontology, paleoecology, paleoclimatology and Quaternary geology.
New developments in already established regional projects and new initiatives dealing with the geology of the continent will be summarized and presented on a regular basis. Short notes, discussions, book reviews and conference and workshop reports will also be included when relevant.