Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America

Landscapes of western Argentina are dominated by aeolian sand of diverse composition, reflecting multiple sediment sources. This study focuses on determining the petrography and geochemical composition of sand from three western Argentina dune fields, Médanos Grandes, Médanos Negros and San Luis, to...

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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi
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spelling paper:paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi2023-06-08T16:30:12Z Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America Dune field Geochemistry Late Quaternary Petrography Sediment source South America dune field eolian deposit feldspar geochemistry lithology loess metamorphic rock petrography provenance pumice quartz Quaternary sand trace element volcanic rock Argentina La Rioja [Argentina] Medanos Grandes Medanos Negros San Juan [Argentina] San Luis Landscapes of western Argentina are dominated by aeolian sand of diverse composition, reflecting multiple sediment sources. This study focuses on determining the petrography and geochemical composition of sand from three western Argentina dune fields, Médanos Grandes, Médanos Negros and San Luis, to better constrain the provenance of aeolian sand and its relation to Pampean loess. Médanos Grandes sands are litharenites to feldspathic litharenites, with metamorphic and volcanic rock fragments and lesser amounts of quartz and feldspar. Trace elements (U, Th, Sc, V) indicate the dominance of felsic source. A mixed provenance, with contributions from Sierras Pampeanas metamorphic-igneous complex, pre-Quaternary volcanic rocks and direct input from Andean explosive volcanism, is assumed. Médanos Negros sands are lithic feldsarenites, with abundant feldspars and quartz and lesser amounts of rock fragments. Trace elements indicate a mafic source for these aeolian sands, geochemically and petrographically distinct likely due to the input of ultramafic-mafic lithologies of the Sierra Pampeanas. The San Luis sand has substantial petrographic variability with lithic feldsarenites, feldspathic litharenites and lithic arenite. Trace element composition indicates a felsic source. A diagnostic attribute is the dominance of fresh pumice and volcanic glass shards. Contributions from Andean volcanic sources and local metamorphic and igneous rocks are ascertained. Pampean loess and western Argentina dune field sand show broad petrographic and geochemical similarities indicating aeolian sand, silt particles and, eventually, far travelled dust may have a relatively common source. Another viable source for loess is associated with aeolian abrasion in the many dune fields in western Argentina. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 2010 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Dune field
Geochemistry
Late Quaternary
Petrography
Sediment source
South America
dune field
eolian deposit
feldspar
geochemistry
lithology
loess
metamorphic rock
petrography
provenance
pumice
quartz
Quaternary
sand
trace element
volcanic rock
Argentina
La Rioja [Argentina]
Medanos Grandes
Medanos Negros
San Juan [Argentina]
San Luis
spellingShingle Dune field
Geochemistry
Late Quaternary
Petrography
Sediment source
South America
dune field
eolian deposit
feldspar
geochemistry
lithology
loess
metamorphic rock
petrography
provenance
pumice
quartz
Quaternary
sand
trace element
volcanic rock
Argentina
La Rioja [Argentina]
Medanos Grandes
Medanos Negros
San Juan [Argentina]
San Luis
Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
topic_facet Dune field
Geochemistry
Late Quaternary
Petrography
Sediment source
South America
dune field
eolian deposit
feldspar
geochemistry
lithology
loess
metamorphic rock
petrography
provenance
pumice
quartz
Quaternary
sand
trace element
volcanic rock
Argentina
La Rioja [Argentina]
Medanos Grandes
Medanos Negros
San Juan [Argentina]
San Luis
description Landscapes of western Argentina are dominated by aeolian sand of diverse composition, reflecting multiple sediment sources. This study focuses on determining the petrography and geochemical composition of sand from three western Argentina dune fields, Médanos Grandes, Médanos Negros and San Luis, to better constrain the provenance of aeolian sand and its relation to Pampean loess. Médanos Grandes sands are litharenites to feldspathic litharenites, with metamorphic and volcanic rock fragments and lesser amounts of quartz and feldspar. Trace elements (U, Th, Sc, V) indicate the dominance of felsic source. A mixed provenance, with contributions from Sierras Pampeanas metamorphic-igneous complex, pre-Quaternary volcanic rocks and direct input from Andean explosive volcanism, is assumed. Médanos Negros sands are lithic feldsarenites, with abundant feldspars and quartz and lesser amounts of rock fragments. Trace elements indicate a mafic source for these aeolian sands, geochemically and petrographically distinct likely due to the input of ultramafic-mafic lithologies of the Sierra Pampeanas. The San Luis sand has substantial petrographic variability with lithic feldsarenites, feldspathic litharenites and lithic arenite. Trace element composition indicates a felsic source. A diagnostic attribute is the dominance of fresh pumice and volcanic glass shards. Contributions from Andean volcanic sources and local metamorphic and igneous rocks are ascertained. Pampean loess and western Argentina dune field sand show broad petrographic and geochemical similarities indicating aeolian sand, silt particles and, eventually, far travelled dust may have a relatively common source. Another viable source for loess is associated with aeolian abrasion in the many dune fields in western Argentina. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
title Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
title_short Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
title_full Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
title_fullStr Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
title_full_unstemmed Petrography and geochemistry of late Quaternary dune fields of western Argentina: Provenance of aeolian materials in southern South America
title_sort petrography and geochemistry of late quaternary dune fields of western argentina: provenance of aeolian materials in southern south america
publishDate 2010
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_18759637_v2_n1_p33_Tripaldi
_version_ 1768543966723047424