posted on 2016-06-21, 11:21authored byA. Silva, A. Mora, V. Caballero, G. Rodriguez, C. Ruiz, N. Moreno, M. Parra, J. C. Ramirez-Arias, M. Ibáñez, I. Quintero
<p>The Cenozoic stratigraphic infill of hinterland and foreland basins in central Colombia holds the record of basin development
during tectonic inversion of rift in the context of subduction orogenesis. A comprehensive review of detrital U–Pb geochronologic
and thermochronologic data reveals that activation of interconnected fault systems in the hinterland Magdalena Valley and
the Eastern Cordillera occurred coevally since Paleocene time. Longitudinal basins were fed by detritus shed from the Central
Cordillera carried along axial drainage systems in open basins in times where slow deformation rates prevailed. Faster deformation
since Oligocene resulted in the transient formation of internally drained basins. Differential along-strike exhumation and
subsidence patterns in the Eastern Cordillera and the foredeep, respectively, document tectonic acceleration since late Miocene,
which we attribute to superimposed collision of the Panama arc leading to oroclinal bending in the Cordillera. Our data documents
that the inherited structural grain led to the formation of longitudinal drainage patterns, even in closed basins, which seem
to be a general feature of early stages of inversion. We hypothesize that the presence of more humid climatic conditions and
faster tectonic rates along the range’s eastern margin favoured the development of internally drained basins, as has also
been shown in the Central Andes.
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