Special Issue dedicated to Francisco Hervé: Global tectonic processes of the ancient southwestern Gondwana margin in South America and the Antarctic Peninsula
Edited by:
- Mauricio Calderón, PhD, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile
- Paula Castillo, PhD, Universität Münster, Deutschland
- Robert Pankhurst, PhD ScD, United Kingdom
Submission status: Extended until September 30, 2025
Special Issue: Geoethics in Chile and Latin America - Contextual reflections for responsible geoscience
Edited by:
- Luisa Pinto, Universidad de Chile
- Hernán Bobadilla, Politecnico di Milano
- Tania Villaseñor, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Pablo Ramírez, Universidad de Chile
- Millarca Valenzuela, Universidad Católica del Norte
Submission status: Open between August 15, 2025, and March 31, 2026
Constraints on the magnitude of strike-slip displacement along the Fagnano Transform System, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Pablo J. Torres-Carbonell, Eduardo B. Olivero, Luis V. Dimieri
Abstract
New field data, specially the discovery of the contact between Upper Cretaceous-Paleocene rock units in a previously unexplored area in southeast Tierra del Fuego, allowed us to estimate the amount of strike-slip displacement accommodated by the Fagnano Transform System (FTS). This stratigraphic contact is exposed both to the north and south of the FTS and it is deformed by aNW-SE compressive regional structure that forms part of the Fuegian thrust-fold belt, called the Cerro Pirámide-Cerro Malvinera Thrust (PMT). The compressive structure is laterally offset by the FTS. The precise mapping of the PMT and the Upper Cretaceous-Paleocene contact shows a horizontal offset of ca. 48 km along the transform system in the Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego. A maximum age of ~7 Ma for the beginning of the strike-slip in this sector is estimated by combining the obtained offset with published data on the slip-rate along the FTS in Tierra del Fuego. This Late Miocene age coincides with the creation of the divergent plate boundary between Sandwich and Scotia Plates, which has been proposed as responsible for the beginning of the strike-slip activity between South America and Scotia Plates.